CHECK IT OUT
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You won’t need the luck of the Irish to find great reading for St.
Patrick’s Day at Newport Beach Public Libraries.
Just out from Irish author Niall Williams is “The Fall of Light,” a
dreamy epic that follows the travails of four brothers and their father
during the 19th century potato famine. As their destinies carry them to
Hungary, America and Africa, clan members are separated and united
several times in a saga replete with disaster, unabashed romance and
sometimes implausible adventure.
In the same general genre is “My Dream of You,” Nuala O’Faolain’s
debut novel published on the heels of her best-selling memoir, “Are You
Somebody?” Heroine Kathleen de Burca -- a middle-aged Irish travel writer
living in London -- shares O’Faolain’s personal despair over a loveless
family life and the plight of Irish women. Her search for passion
provides the basis for a complex portrait of a cynical yet ever-hopeful
romantic.
The romance is rooted in affection for Irish culture in Andrew
Greeley’s “Irish Love.” In his latest mystery starring singer/psychic
Nuala Anne McGrail and her American writer husband, the prolific priest
pens a tale about a series of crimes linked with a century-old mass
murder. Descriptions of the wild Irish coast and a carefully constructed
historical framework add interest to the somewhat formulaic whodunit.
Also set on blustery Irish cliffs is “The Nature of Water and Air,” a
debut novel from award-winning poet Regina McBride. The coming of age
tale about a young girl stumbling into forbidden romance as she chases
her mother’s secrets combines folklore with gothic romance. Descriptions
of the dark Irish soul are as hypnotic as the complicated plot, likely to
appeal to fans of brooding mysteries.
For those who enjoy both a good story and good history, Peter Stevens
provides a dramatic report of a real-life adventure in “The Voyage of the
Catalpa: A Daring Escape, a Perilous Journey and Six Irish Rebels’ Flight
to Freedom.” Read about struggles for independence following the
attempted uprisings of the 1860s, involving escapes from Australian
prisons and a rescue via whaling ship in this stirring account.
There’s hardly a better example of feisty Irish courage than that
displayed by Ronan Tynan, best known as one of the three Irish tenors.
After having both legs amputated below the knee, relearning to walk,
winning 18 gold medals and 14 world records in the Paralympic games, and
becoming a doctor, Tynan wrote “Halfway Home: My Life ‘til Now.” If
you’ve ever looked for inspiration for overcoming adversity, find it this
new autobiography offering ample testimony to the power of the human
spirit.
* CHECK IT OUT is written by the staff of the Newport Beach Public
Library. This week’ column is by Melissa Adams. All titles may be
reserved from home or office computers by accessing the catalog at
www.newportbeachlibrary.org.
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