An Anarchist's Story: The Life of Ethel MacDonald

An Anarchist's Story: The Life of Ethel MacDonald

by Chris Dolan (Author)

Synopsis

In 1936, with civil war sweeping through Spain, Ethel Macdonald - a working-class girl from Motherwell - was to become, for a year, one of the world's most famous voices. She was perhaps the first example of an 'embedded reporter', sending dispatches and broadcasts back from the Spanish Anarchist camp in Barcelona to the UK. But she made no pretence of 'impartiality' or balance of opinion; she was a lifelong anarchist, utterly committed to her cause. Mystery surrounds Ethel Macdonald, from her birth certificate to the last days of her life. When Ethel suddenly fell silent in Barcelona she became the focus of an international search and intergovernmental negotiations. In 1937 the optimism of the previous year had gone. Ethel had been imprisoned, escaped, and was in hiding in a foreign country in the grip of war.Dubbed on newspaper headlines 'The Scots Scarlet Pimpernel', she was imprisoned by her erstwhile comrades, the very people she had been fighting alongside; and now that she was silenced and in danger, she became even more of an enigma.
This book, exactly a century after her birth, uses contemporary accounts, her own words and those of her close associates to unravel the extraordinary mystery of Ethel Macdonald and examines the unique impact that she had during this fascinating period of European history.

$3.50

Save:$9.99 (74%)

Quantity

2 in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 246
Publisher: Birlinn Ltd
Published: 30 Apr 2009

ISBN 10: 1841586854
ISBN 13: 9781841586854

Media Reviews
The exhilarating true story of Scotland's 'Scarlet Pimpernel' Ethel's reportage from the frontlines of the Spanish Civil War fascinated the UK. At the time, Ethel was the voice of the Republic to Europe.
Author Bio
Award-winning poet, author and playwright Chris Dolan was born in Glasgow. He writes regularly for radio and screen, and his screenplay for An Anarchist's Story was broadcast by the BBC in 2006. He has written features, reviews and travel pieces for various newspapers and magazines, including The Independent and Scotland on Sunday, and he has been Literary Reviewer and Features Writer for The Herald since 2002.