This collection of essays from a broad range of academics, historians and journalists gives a many sided view of the famine which devastated the rural areas of Ireland in the 1840s and resulted in a population decline of 50% from 8 million to 4 million in a few short years due to starvation and emigration. The material ranges from political to social to economic and details many family histories from public records all against the backdrop of a massive failure on the British government`s part to respond to the failure of the potato crop in a humane way. Any help which did arrive was from the general public or church organisations. An illuminating read about an unforgetable time in Irish history