When you grow up in Ireland, you have an opinion on Gaelic games, whether you like it or not. Most children play either Gaelic football, hurling or camogie at school, and the All-Ireland Finals, contested every year by the best teams in the country, are impossible to ignore. For the record, Ciarán Murphy adores the GAA (Gaelic Athletic Association) unconditionally and unreservedly, and this book is his love letter to the sport.
Murphy is a well-known journalist on the Emerald Isle: a regular contributor to the Irish Times and a host of the popular Second Captains podcast. Hailing from the village Milltown in North-East Galway (close to my own neck of the woods - hon Clonberne!), he has been steeped in the GAA from an early age. With his father coaching several Milltown teams over the years and uncle Jim Carney a renowned GAA reporter in his own right, avoiding Gaelic games was never an option. Just as well he loves it so much.
It is quite a niche book, this one. There is a lot of precise detail about Galway football - county team, club championship etc, so some prior knowledge of the sport certainly helps. Remembering his schooldays, Murphy talks about his time in St Jarlath's of Tuam, a institution famous for producing the finest Galway footballers. A talented player himself by the sounds of it, he was never quite good enough to make the Galway senior squad, but a valuable member of his local team in Milltown. He lined out there for several years before transferring to Templeogue Synge Street in Dublin.
So what makes the GAA so special? Murphy clearly admires the amateur ethos of the sport - your footballing hero on a Sunday could be delivering your post on Monday morning, as in the case of Galway legend Ja Fallon. But it's also the sense of community that grassroots GAA brings: you are born into a parish, you play alongside your friends and neighbours and support that club for the rest of your days. It fosters a bond that can never be broken - the joy of victory and heartache of loss is shared with the people you love most.
The book finishes on a strong note. Murphy gives us a diary of his season as a member of a Templeogue Synge Street team and it really gets inside the mindset of a typical GAA player - the ambition, the addiction and the commitment it all takes, no matter what level you are operating at. And then there is a wonderful coda about the life of Sean Brennan, a Milltown player who lost everything but found himself again through Gaelic football. It's a beautiful, life-affirming piece and truly sums up what the GAA is all about. This memoir made me reassess and reappreciate my relationship with Gaelic games. When somebody writes so passionately and eloquently about a subject they love, you can't help but sit up and take notice.