
Kevin C. Kearns
Author of Dublin Tenement Life: An Oral History
About the Author
Kevin C. Kearns is a social historian and professor emeritus at the University of Northern Colorado. He has conducted twenty-eight research trips to Ireland and written seven books on Dublin, including Dublin Pub Life and Lore: An Oral History. He now lives in the village of Charlotte, Vermont. show more (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Works by Kevin C. Kearns
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I'd known about this event from my mother, who was living in Tempelogue (South Dublin) at the time as a five-and-a-quarter year old. She'd heard the planes, and was worried about them, before being sent back to bed. This is an in-depth look at the bombing itself, with some backtracking to previous bombing incidents by the Luftwaffe, as well as the portentous assistance P.M. de Valera gave Northern Ireland during a bombing of Belfast. Kearns appears to mine a vast trove of interviews he has show more with Northsiders -- you see the same characters turn up here as in some of his other books. Amazingly, it shows that de Valera's government did not do all it could have done, and yet Finna Fail did hang on to government in the '43 elections. An interesting book. show less
Kevin Kearns once again mines his trove of first-person interviews -- you'll see the same Northside characters in this book as you do in others -- to look at the frantic weeks Ireland suffered in the winter of 1947 when a crippling series of blizzards and cold weather paralyzed the country. You do get a sense of how thin were the margins that Ireland was operating on in the post-war era, even though it hadn't suffered badly in the war. There's an interesting series of observations on the show more actions - or inactions - of the de Valera government, though surprisingly there's no indication of whether the handling of the crisis had an effect on the following year's election, which finally ousted de Valera after a long stretch. For fans of Irish history. show less
Fascinating, mainly oral history from those who lived it, many of whom seem to have a slightly rosy memory. Also important for recording Dublin dialect.
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