Author picture

Shan F. Bullock

Author of Thomas Andrews, Shipbuilder

8+ Works 27 Members 2 Reviews

Works by Shan F. Bullock

Associated Works

Tagged

Common Knowledge

There is no Common Knowledge data for this author yet. You can help.

Members

Reviews

2 reviews
https://nwhyte.livejournal.com/2894512.html

It's a pretty awful book. James "Red" Shaw, a middle-class Protestant veteran of the Boer War, returns to Fermanagh around 1904 (when the book was published), and is co-opted as commander of the local Nationalist militia, changing sides partly because the Protestant girl he loves is in love with another man. The national uprising is successful and a revolutionary Republican government takes power in Dublin and across most of the island; but Ulster show more descends into sectarian violence, with Shaw and his Red Leaguers taking it out on his own co-religionists locally. A lot of this was eerily reminiscent of more recent times in the Balkans. The narrator gets to Dublin with the girl (who remains unimpressed and terrified) but sees social cohesion disintegrating under a lazy and corrupt administration. As the Great Powers (Britain, Germany and the USA) prepare to invade Ireland to restore order, he makes his escape to France.

The protagonist is such an unpleasant character - presiding over ethnic cleansing and monstrously intimidating the unfortunate Leah - that it's difficult to engage with the book. It's a little redeemed by considering the wider picture: the author was based in London, and wrote a number of novels with the same Fermanagh setting as The Red Leaguers (but without the revolution timeline) in which the protagonist, clearly based on himself, is the chap who Leah is really in love with. So perhaps Shaw is the romantic but wrong side of his personality, seduced by revolutionary ideals. It's still not a great vindication.
show less
Thoughtful, readable poems by a minor Irish poet

You May Also Like

Associated Authors

Statistics

Works
8
Also by
2
Members
27
Popularity
#483,026
Rating
½ 3.4
Reviews
2
ISBNs
8