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Angela Bourke

    Bourke is celebrated for her incisive exploration of Irish history and culture, particularly the lived experience in Dublin. Her work frequently delves into the complexities of human relationships and the impact of societal shifts on individuals. Through meticulous research and vivid prose, she brings the past to life, offering readers an engaging perspective on Irish identity. Her literary contribution lies in her ability to weave personal narratives into broader historical contexts.

    Pimlico - 369: The Burning of Bridget Cleary
    Maeve Brennan : homesick at The New Yorker
    • The tragic odyssey of Maeve Brennan, The New Yorker's Long Winded Lady, from happy Dublin childhood to Manhattan glamour, from brilliant literary accomplishment to madness, homelessness, death, and rediscovery . Maeve Brennan was an Irishwoman & a New Yorker; an intellectual & a beauty; a daughter, sister, aunt, lover, wife & friend. Witty, stylish, small & quick, she dazzled everyone who met her. She wrote some of the finest English prose of the 20th century, yet she was practically unknown in Ireland during her lifetime, and for 20 years before her death, was forgotten in her adopted America. Rediscovered & republished since 1997, her writings remain in the mind like a previously unknown species of animal or plant. Patiently, almost without mercy, her Irish stories probe the discomforts of quiet, careful, middle-class Dubliners, offering an unparalleled feminine view of a society & a place, an intimate history of modern Ireland; by contrast, her American stories throw the life of privileged New Yorkers & their Irish servants into grotesque relief. Brennan's fiction bores deep into her own memory, and her family's. It returns obsessively to the same houses, the same cruxes in a

      Maeve Brennan : homesick at The New Yorker
    • Pimlico - 369: The Burning of Bridget Cleary

      A True Story

      • 272 pages
      • 10 hours of reading
      3.5(18)Add rating

      In 1825 26 year old Bridget Cleary disappeared from her house in rural Tipperary. At first, some said that the fairies had taken her into their stronghold in a nearby hill, from where she would emerge, riding a white horse. But then her body was found in a shallow grave. her husband, father, aunt and cousins were arrested and charged, while newspapers in nearby Clonmel, and then in Dublin, Cork, London and further afield attempted to make sense of what had happened. In this lurid and fascinating incident, set in the dawn of the twentieth century, we wirness the collision of town and country, of superstition and scepticism, of old and new. The torture and burning of Bridget Cleary caused a sensation in its own time and continues to reverberate more than 100 years later.

      Pimlico - 369: The Burning of Bridget Cleary