Our Man in Hibernia

Our Man in Hibernia
Title Our Man in Hibernia PDF eBook
Author Charlie Connelly
Publisher Little, Brown Book Group
Total Pages 256
Release 2010-09-02
Genre Travel
ISBN 0748115072

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Each year on St Patrick's Day eighty million people around the world celebrate their Irish ancestry. Millions more don leprechaun hats and down pints of Guinness in the annual high-fiving of Ireland and the Irish. Charlie Connelly was one of them. He thought he had a good idea of what Ireland was all about. He was, after all, practically Irish. He had a bodhran and everything. Then, when he was least expecting it, he went to live there. Our Man in Hibernia follows Charlie's adventures among the Irish. Immersing himself in Ireland's language, music and literature, he learns how closely the rose-tinted image he'd grown up with matches the reality, and explores the land, from the small patch of Connemara bog that changed the world to the Holy Tree Stump of Rathkeale. From defining moments of the country's history - the Great Famine and the Easter Rising - to its quirkier phenomena, such as the National Ploughing Championships and the Rose of Tralee, in Our Man in Hibernia Charlie Connelly paints an evocative, entertaining and witty portrait of Ireland today.

Pacata Hibernia; Or, a History of the Wars in Ireland, During the Reign of Queen Elizabeth

Pacata Hibernia; Or, a History of the Wars in Ireland, During the Reign of Queen Elizabeth
Title Pacata Hibernia; Or, a History of the Wars in Ireland, During the Reign of Queen Elizabeth PDF eBook
Author Thomas Stafford
Publisher
Total Pages 408
Release 1810
Genre
ISBN

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Pacata Hibernia; Or, a History of the Wars in Ireland, During the Reign of Queen Elizabeth

Pacata Hibernia; Or, a History of the Wars in Ireland, During the Reign of Queen Elizabeth
Title Pacata Hibernia; Or, a History of the Wars in Ireland, During the Reign of Queen Elizabeth PDF eBook
Author Sir Thomas Stafford
Publisher
Total Pages 370
Release 1810
Genre Ireland
ISBN

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Walker's Hibernian Magazine, Or, Compendium of Entertaining Knowledge

Walker's Hibernian Magazine, Or, Compendium of Entertaining Knowledge
Title Walker's Hibernian Magazine, Or, Compendium of Entertaining Knowledge PDF eBook
Author
Publisher
Total Pages 684
Release 1811
Genre
ISBN

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Gilbert

Gilbert
Title Gilbert PDF eBook
Author Charlie Connelly
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing
Total Pages 193
Release 2015-10-08
Genre Sports & Recreation
ISBN 1472917596

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There are few more instantly recognisable figures, from any era, from any walk of life, than W.G. Grace. With his enormous height, beer-barrel girth and immense beard he was - and remains - a caricaturist's dream. Too much so, in many ways. Arguably the finest and most influential cricketer who ever lived and one of the first true celebrities Grace became a persona rather than a person, racketing up unprecedented amounts of runs and wickets while slowly vanishing behind an increasing swirl of myth and apocrypha. Gilbert is the first examination of Grace to dig beneath the surface, blow the fog of fable and explore the man himself, the human being, and ask what he might have thought and felt. Who, in effect, was W.G. Grace? In the year that marks the centenary of Grace's death, Charlie Connelly charts the final years of his life, from his fiftieth birthday celebrations in 1898 to his death at the age of 67 in 1915, through the eyes of Grace himself. In an unusual take on this most eminent Victorian and extraordinary pioneering sportsman, Connelly draws on contemporary documents and accounts to imagine Grace's progress through his final years. It was no quiet dotage either: he played cricket until a year before his death, captained the England curling team and remained an enthusiastic golfer and shooter to the end. He also dealt with bereavement, ill health and was greatly troubled by the gathering clouds of war. He was, in short, a human being as much as a sporting colossus. Combining facts and imagination, Gilbert is an affectionate and beautifully written account of the Champion's later life that comes closer than ever before to giving a sense of the real W.G. Grace behind the mythology; the perennially childlike soul saddled with the weight of genius. To the public he was The Doctor, The Champion and W.G., but to those who knew him best he was simply Gilbert. This is a book about Gilbert.

History of the Westminster Election,

History of the Westminster Election,
Title History of the Westminster Election, PDF eBook
Author J. Hartley
Publisher
Total Pages 588
Release 1784
Genre Caricatures and cartoons
ISBN

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Our Man in Charleston

Our Man in Charleston
Title Our Man in Charleston PDF eBook
Author Christopher Dickey
Publisher Crown
Total Pages 410
Release 2016-07-26
Genre History
ISBN 0307887286

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Between the Confederacy and recognition by Great Britain stood one unlikely Englishman who hated the slave trade. His actions helped determine the fate of a nation. When Robert Bunch arrived in Charleston to take up the post of British consul in 1853, he was young and full of ambition, but even he couldn’t have imagined the incredible role he would play in the history-making events to unfold. In an age when diplomats often were spies, Bunch’s job included sending intelligence back to the British government in London. Yet as the United States threatened to erupt into Civil War, Bunch found himself plunged into a double life, settling into an amiable routine with his slavery-loving neighbors on the one hand, while working furiously to thwart their plans to achieve a new Confederacy. As secession and war approached, the Southern states found themselves in an impossible position. They knew that recognition from Great Britain would be essential to the survival of the Confederacy, and also that such recognition was likely to be withheld if the South reopened the Atlantic slave trade. But as Bunch meticulously noted from his perch in Charleston, secession’s red-hot epicenter, that trade was growing. And as Southern leaders continued to dissemble publicly about their intentions, Bunch sent dispatch after secret dispatch back to the Foreign Office warning of the truth—that economic survival would force the South to import slaves from Africa in massive numbers. When the gears of war finally began to turn, and Bunch was pressed into service on an actual spy mission to make contact with the Confederate government, he found himself in the middle of a fight between the Union and Britain that threatened, in the boast of Secretary of State William Seward, to “wrap the world in flames.” In this masterfully told story, Christopher Dickey introduces Consul Bunch as a key figure in the pitched battle between those who wished to reopen the floodgates of bondage and misery, and those who wished to dam the tide forever. Featuring a remarkable cast of diplomats, journalists, senators, and spies, Our Man in Charleston captures the intricate, intense relationship between great powers on the brink of war.