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Cover of 1949: A Novel of the Irish Free State

1949: A Novel of the Irish Free State

✍ Scribed by Llywelyn, Morgan


Book ID
107832146
Publisher
Forge Books
Year
2003
Tongue
English
Weight
296 KB
Series
1949
Category
Fiction
ISBN-13
9780312867539

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


1949 tells the story of Ireland's progress as seen through the eyes of one woman, from the bitter aftermath of civil war to the controversial dawn of a modern state. Ursula Halloran, the daughter of a famous revolutionary, comes of age in the turbulent 1920s. An education in Switzerland broadens her world view, but Ireland has become a repressive Catholic state where women are second-class citizens. Married women cannot hold jobs and divorce is illegal.

Fighting against the stifling constraints of church and state, Ursula forges an exciting career in the fledgling Irish radio service. Her life is torn apart when she finds herself caught between two men who love her in very different ways. Refusing to surrender her hard-won independence to marriage, or her illegitimate infant to an orphanage, she flees to Europe to bear her child. There she takes a job with the League of Nations and is caught up in the terrifying outbreak of World War II. Hard decisions and desperate situations stand between her and any hope of returning to the land she loves.

From Publishers Weekly

During the period covered in Llywelyn's third magisterial novel (after 1916 and 1921) in her Irish Century series, from the island's division into the primarily Catholic Free State and the mostly Protestant Northern Ireland in the early 1920s to the creation of the Irish Republic in 1949, the outside world changes much while Ireland changes painfully little. Avoiding such stock Irish themes as the "curse" of drink and emigration to foreign and unwelcoming shores, the story focuses on the indomitable Ursula Halloran (adopted daughter of rebel Ned Halloran, introduced in 1916), a young woman who first works for the Irish radio service and later the League of Nations. The unwed Ursula discovers how oppressive the new Catholic state can be when she becomes pregnant and must flee the country. Eventually, Ursula must choose between the two men in her life, one an Irish civil servant, the other an English pilot. The melodrama is mitigated by the poignancy of her forever losing the man she truly loves. Moving as well is Ursula's aiding a Jewish man who brought his children to Britain for safety on the eve of WWII and is returning to Nazi Germany, where his wife still resides. Well-realized characters and a vivid history make for richly gratifying reading.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist

Combining fact with fiction, Llywelyn continues her riveting multivolume novel of Ireland in the twentieth century. As in Volumes 1916 (1998) and 1921 ( 2001 ) , she utilizes the tortured history of a nation torn apart by civil war as the dramatic backdrop for another tale of ordinary people caught up in extraordinary events. After participating in the Easter Rebellion of 1916 and witnessing the partition of his beloved Ireland into two states in 1921, committed republican Ned Halloran has passed on his passion for the cause to his adopted daughter, Ursula. Ursula forges an independent life for herself as a radio broadcaster. She becomes personally involved with two men, neither of whom she wants to marry. After she becomes pregnant, Ursula is forced to leave an Ireland where unwed motherhood is unthinkable. Later she returns to her native country and sees Ireland usher in a new era as the Republic is formally inaugurated in 1949. Llywelyn's great strength is her ability to communicate sweeping historical events through the eyes of both passive bystanders and active participants. Margaret Flanagan
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1949 - A Novel of the Irish Free State (
✍ Morgan Llywelyn πŸ“‚ Fiction πŸ“… 2003. ;,20 πŸ› Tom Doherty 🌐 English βš– 270 KB πŸ‘ 3 views

_1949_ tells the story of Ireland's progress as seen through the eyes of one woman, from the bitter aftermath of civil war to the controversial dawn of a modern state. Ursula Halloran, the daughter of a famous revolutionary, comes of age in the turbulent 1920s. An education in Switzerland broadens h