When Kate O'Hanlon started work at the Royal Victoria Hospital in Belfast, it was an Emergency room like any other. So when the telephone rang on 26 June 1966 with the news that there had been a shooting in Malvern Street, no one in the department believed it. Soon such incidents became daily occurrences and the Royal went on to treat more victims of the Troubles than any other hospital. Kate spent sixteen years as nurse in charge of the ER, working through many of the darkest days of the Troubles. Told with her trademark blend of warmth, compassion, and humor, this is a fascinating and extraordinary story of nursing on the front line.
I would have liked a few anecdotes of her time learning nursing, perhaps I would have connected more with the author's story. I found the style spare, almost telegraphic; you can tell she spent most of her professional life writing reports for people who knew what she was talking about.
Admittedly I am slightly biased cos this is by my beloved aunt/godmmother! But it's a fascinating read - all about her many years spent as head nurse in the ER at the Royal Victoria Hospital in Belfast during the start and worst times of the Troubles in Northern Ireland.
She's a fascinating person, who then travelled the world, sharing her knowledge and experiences with others.
You can also learn loads about my family, how she and her brothers (including my dad John!) were born in the Markets and brought up on the Antrim Road. I have to admit to sobbing out loud on a plane journey when reading about how my granny (who I never met) died at home in her bed of a heart attack, surrounded by loved ones.
A real piece of history and all told in Aunt Kathleen's trademark humourous style...
This was an interesting book and I enjoyed it. Once I started reading it, I literally didn't set it down again until it was finished. It was fasinating to hear Kate's memories of her time working in the Royal Hospital during the Troubles. Admittidly it's not the best written book I've ever read - but then Kate isn't a writer, she's a retired nurse so what can we really expect? Also to me it did feel a little bit one sided when it came to the conflict in Northern Ireland at some points. I doubt very much that this was deliberate on Kates part though and suspect it's as much my problem as hers, Having grown up in Northern Ireland during the troubles myself it is difficult to not read it one sidedly