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Bit of Irish Earth

Bit of Irish Earth Cover
Author:
Shanley, Paul
Subjects:
History; Civil War; Immigration; Irish-Americans
Geography:
New England; Ireland
Age:
11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18
Grade:
6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12
ISBN:
0-88092-179-X
Order code:
179X
Price:
$9.99
Online Price:
$7.99
Class sets:
10 or more: $7.00 each. (Order code: 179XS)

This is wonderful historical fiction with its roots in Irish tradition and lore, and the American Civil War. Some of the story is biographical, the rest is wishful blarney.

John Shanley did migrate from Ireland and did join the Union Army. He was wounded in the second battle of Bull Run, and he was later captured and sent to Richmond, probably to Libby Prison as a prisoner of war. But he died in Richmond on January 17, 1864.

Author, Paul Shanley is a distant relative through John’s oldest son. He visited Libby and was so moved that he had to recreate John Shanley’s trek from Ireland to a better life in the United States. He has rewritten family history a bit superimposing possible adventures, an escape from Libby, and a life in Boston and Bangor. John Shanley is given the life he could have had and the reader is treated to the person he most probably would have become because of his personal convictions.

Surely, Irish eyes are smiling on the older Shanley’s enhanced daring do’s and the younger Shanley’s sensitivity to his story. The atmosphere and mood are accurate.

Paul Shanley is a resident of Maine.

This is wonderful historical fiction with its roots in Irish tradition and lore, and the American Civil War. Some of the story is biographical, the rest is wishful blarney.

John Shanley did migrate from Ireland and did join the Union Army. He was wounded in the second battle of Bull Run, and he was later captured and sent to Richmond, probably to Libby Prison as a prisoner of war. But he died in Richmond on January 17, 1864.

Author, Paul Shanley is a distant relative through John’s oldest son. He visited Libby and was so moved that he had to recreate John Shanley’s trek from Ireland to a better life in the United States. He has rewritten family history a bit superimposing possible adventures, an escape from Libby, and a life in Boston and Bangor. John Shanley is given the life he could have had and the reader is treated to the person he most probably would have become because of his personal convictions.

Surely, Irish eyes are smiling on the older Shanley’s enhanced daring do’s and the younger Shanley’s sensitivity to his story. The atmosphere and mood are accurate.

Paul Shanley is a resident of Maine.