South of the Border

South of the Border

by JamesRyan (Author)

Synopsis

The year is 1942, and young Balbriggan teacher Matt Duggan takes up a job in the small town of Rathisland. War is in the air, romance is on the wing with the skittish Madeleine, rehearsals are in progress for a local staging of Hamlet , and lawn tennis alternates with Church and classroom politics in the sedentary midlands.This leisured parochial world detonates when a German Stuka crash-lands in the local bog and pilot Josef is sheltered by local Nazi sympathizers before being turned in by whistle-blower Matt, who'd found his love object canoodling with the manly Kraut. The death in captivity by suicide of the latter impels Madeleine's flight to England and Matt's emotional growth.This nuanced coming-of-age story evokes Emergency Ireland and rehearses the inner narrative of neutrality as public perception contends with private experience in a series of convergent tableaux. Beautifully judged, slow-paced, and implosive, with divided personal loyalties mirroring the dramas of the wider European stage, this little gem of narrative takes the reader into the heart of the experience that was wartime Ireland.

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Quantity

20+ in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 240
Publisher: The Lilliput Press Ltd
Published: 11 Apr 2008

ISBN 10: 1843511347
ISBN 13: 9781843511342

Media Reviews
A mesmerizing story of first love during the Second World War and its far-reaching consequences. -- Kara Rota Irish America Magazine
Author Bio
James Ryan is a native of Rathdowney, Co. Laois and graduate of Trinity College, Dublin. He is a writer and university lecturer at the School of English and Drama, University College Dublin. His previous novels include Home from England (1995), Dismantling Mr Doyle (1997) and Seeds of Doubt (2001).