Bookworm

Ruth Musielak, Charlemont’s Marino: portrait of a landscape (OPW, no price given, 80pp, ISBN 9781406428223). Saothar 38: (Irish Labour History Society, ?25, 192pp, ISSN 03321169). Bryan MacMahon, Robert Tressell, Dubliner: (Kilmacud Stillorgan Local History Society, ?10, 112pp, ISBN 9780954986582). Dominic Phelan, Cornelius Ryan: D-Day reporter (Dominic Phelan, no price given, 80pp, ISBN 9781497432543). Tom Reilly, … Read more

Cavan County Museum

Cavan County Museum inhabits a nineteenth-century house that was once home to a gentry family and then a convent. The exhibition area is spread over three floors and a good tip is to take the lift to the top floor and then work your way down. The museum overall, like its building, is stately and … Read more

The Torture Files

1972 remains a key year of the ‘Troubles’: the year that witnessed the highest death toll, the most notorious mass killing—‘Bloody Sunday’—and what has by now become the most infamous single killing, the much-publicised ‘disappearing’ of Jean McConville. Bloody Sunday was the culmination of an increasingly aggressive British approach to the crisis in Northern Ireland … Read more

Jimmy’s Hall

British director Ken Loach is well known for his cinematic accounts of fraught historical moments, dealing with the Spanish and Irish civil wars respectively in Land and freedom (1995) and The wind that shakes the barley (2006). In his latest outing he has turned his gaze to Ireland in the 1930s, a period when post-revolutionary … Read more