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Barefoot in Mullyneeny is Bryan Gallagher's evocative tale of a childhood remembered through the people and landscape of Fermanagh. Bryan chronicles a time when all the big boys went to school in bare feet and secretly watched the Saturday night bands and dances in halls lit by Tilley lamps; where it was known to be nothing less than the biblical truth that if you put a horse-hair across the palm of your hand when you were about to be slapped, the cane would split in two. This remarkable memoir vividly recreates life in rural Ireland in the 1940s and 50s.
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Previews available in: English
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Barefoot in Mullyneeny: A Boy's Journey Towards Belonging
October 1, 2006, HarperCollins UK
Paperback
in English
000722088X 9780007220885
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Barefoot in Mullyneeny: A Boy's Journey Towards Belonging
October 1, 2006, HarperCollins UK
in English
0007204051 9780007204052
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Barefoot in Mullyneeny: a boy's journey towards belonging
2006, ISIS Large Print
in English
- Large print ed.
0753193728 9780753193723
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Barefoot in Mullyneeny: A Boy's Journey Towards Belonging
October 1, 2006, HarperCollins UK
Hardcover
in English
0007204051 9780007204052
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Book Details
Edition Notes
Originally published: London: HarperCollins Entertainment, 2005.
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Work Description
Bryan Gallagher's reminiscences of the Ireland of his youth, first heard on Radio 4's 'Home Truths', transport you to a world of boyhood pranks, playground politics and the confusion of growing up in a land that is every bit as magical and captivating as the stories he has to tell.Barefoot in Mullyneeny is Bryan Gallagher's evocative tale of a childhood remembered through the people and landscape of Fermanagh, near the beautiful shores of Lough Erne in Ireland. Bryan chronicles a time when all the big boys went to school in bare feet and secretly watched the Saturday night bands and dances in halls lit by Tilley lamps; where it was known to be nothing less than the biblical truth that if you put a horse-hair across the palm of your hand when you were about to be punished at school, the cane would split in two. Gallagher's writing will touch the hearts of those who long for the innocence of childhood and the simplicity of an era long past. Whether relating tales of murderous bicycle chases through the darkened streets of Cavan, of ghosts and fairy forts or the anguish of emigration, this remarkable memoir vividly recreates life in rural Ireland in the 1940s and 50s. For those who thought that life in Ireland was one of the poverty and misery of James Joyce or Frank McCourt, Barefoot in Mullyneeny offers a view of the Ireland of yesteryear that combines the touching, homely nostalgia of Nigel Slater's Toast and Laurie Lee's Cider with Rosie with a humorous optimism that is unmistakably Ireland at its best.
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