This text is the story of rootlessnes, of a London-Irish boy who has two identities and feels at home with neither. John Walsh found the Irishness of his parents' Battersea home stiflingly warm and puzzlingly foreign. Spellbound equally by Mick Jagger and by images of Irish martyrdom, he discovered at the age of 16 an extended family he had never known existed. In the hidden life of Galway was revelation that begged a crucial question: how do we know where our true nature Lies? By his mother's bedside in a Galway hospital, 30 years later, he starts to unpick the past, looking for clues to his identity.
John Walsh is a writer and commentator who contributes columns, features, interviews and restaurant reviews. He has been editor of The Independent Magazine, literary editor of the Sunday Times and features editor of the London Evening Standard.
Librarian’s note: There is more than one author in the Goodreads database with this name.
This is an affectionate and affecting account of what it was like to grow up with Irish heritage in England in the 60s & 70s. As one of the reviews says, it rings more bells than the Angelus.
another book that had been on the shelf far too long so I'm glad I took time out to give it a go....I think the tagline a Irish romance put me off as I was thinking maybe this was a love story...it sort of is but instead the object of romance is Ireland from an Anglo Irish perspective. I enjoyed this it explored irishness the connection and also the alienation from someone who has one foot in the camp..the memoir was well written and had enough recent pop culture moments to drag me in when I was maybe at the risk of losing interest.
Excellent, well written, drew me in on every page. This is a memoir with a difference. As the second part of the title mentions, this is an Irish romance and so though written as a unique style of memoir, the author highlights his parents and their distinctive "Irishness". Having some Irish roots, I was intrigued with the solid connection to the American South, in accent and in idioms, West VA and Virginia specifically. This book is worth a thorough read for anyone but particularly those who are interested in the "larger than life" culture of the Irish.
This was so wonderful to read. I want to tell everyone with Irish connections living away from Ireland to read this book. I'm Scottish with an Irish mum, brought up in Scotland but spent every holiday in Ireland. I always felt like an outsider and wanted to be in the real Irish club. I would try and be like them, but I was always so Scottish it was an impossible goal. I accept I'm Scottish and Irish. This is now one of my all time favourite books.
There were moments of sheer beauty, laughter and brilliance. There were others that felt like wading through an Irish bog. Fortunately much more of the former.