Terence MacSwiney
- 314pages
- 11 heures de lecture
Using newly-released archive material, Dave Hannigan has pieced together a gripping, dramatic, and poignant account of one man's courageous stand against the might of an empire.
Dave Hannigan est chroniqueur sportif pour The Sunday Tribune, l'Evening Echo et l'Irish Echo de New York. Il est l'auteur de trois livres précédents et également professeur auxiliaire d'histoire au Suffolk County Community College à Long Island.




Using newly-released archive material, Dave Hannigan has pieced together a gripping, dramatic, and poignant account of one man's courageous stand against the might of an empire.
Between defeat by Trevor Berbick in December 1981 and lighting the Olympic flame in July 1996, Ali spent 15 bizarre years traversing the globe. Sometimes hilarious, often terribly poignant, this book chronicles Ali preaching Islam, causing havoc and touching lives from Beijing to Birmingham, Detroit to Damascus, Khartoum to the Khyber Pass.
From epic victories to crushing defeats, Boy Wonder is a poignant comic memoir about fathers and sons, sport, and the rites of passage that shape every childhood.
Barbed Wire University tells the extraordinary tale of Winston Churchill's internment of some of the most gifted Jewish refugee writers, professors, artists and painters of their generation in a camp on the Isle of Man in the Irish Sea. These were men who had fled Hitler's Germany, found refuge in Britain and then in the hysteria of 1940 were held in captivity as a perceived security threat. They turned the camp--Camp Hutchinson--into a school, concert hall and artistic community. This is a forgotten corner of World War II and the way these men constructed a Bohemian idyll in the middle of the Irish Sea, their freedom taken from them, is an extraordinary tale of grit and creativity.