![]() |
|
![]() |
![]() |
Store » Product details
Description: In January, 1847, during the height of the Famine in Ireland, Asenath Hatch Nicholson began her one-woman relief operation in Dublin, organizing a soup-kitchen, visiting homes of the poor and distributing bread in the streets. In a uniquely personal campaign, this remarkable individual travelled the country, aiming to alleviate the starving conditions in Dublin and the West of Ireland and simultaneously 'bring the Bible to the Irish poor'. Compassionate and searing, Annals of the Famine in Ireland is an extraordinary narrative by an eye-witness who beame an integral part of the lives of those she helped to feed and clothe. Her sketches and snapshots, vividly recapturing individuals and events during one of the most momentous periods of Irish history, are introduced and skillfully annotated by a contemporary scholar.
'Among the most pungent of first-hand accounts of the Famine S
'Her narrative is extaordinarily vivid, with a style and a vocabulary
surprisingly modern S
'I've read a great deal about the Famine but I haven't read anything that
captures the horrors in so vivid a style, and with such understanding and
sympathy. She also writes eloquently about the landscape and the people...
I could go on. It is so evocative, so moving.'
"Asenath Nicholson's account of the Irish Famine is a document of
historical importance and contemporary relevance... an American Protestant
widow travelling alone through the starved and staunchly Catholic
countryside of Ireland, Mrs Nicholson is so unique and original that she
seems to have stepped out of a novel. Hers is a true witness and real voice
that penetrates the bloodless statistics of Ireland's Famine agony and
renders the immense human tragedy at its heart. She can be read with equal
reward by anyone interested in feminist studies, Irish history,
philanthropy, the Victorian age, cultural anthropology or the history of
religion. It is remarkable that so striking and unusual a narrator has been
neglected for so long. Mrs Nicholson's time has come. Attention must be
paid."
THE AUTHOR
THE EDITOR Maureen Murphy, Professor of Curriculum and Teaching of Secondary English at Hofstra University in New York, is past President of the American Conference for Irish Studies and writes extensively about Irish culture, folklore, literature and language.
![]() |
|