News of the World
News of the World
From Rhydamman to Inis Mór
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Author: Andrew McNeillieCouldn't load pickup availability
News of the World tells how a young man from north Wales found the means to give shape a youthful dream of ‘going to live’ on Inis Mór, an adventure recorded in his acclaimed first memoir An Aran Keening.
This beautiful, high-spirited story blends moments of high farce, poetry and serious social observation, as the young McNeillie – a self-described ‘quare fellow’ – pursues his dream with a kind of fatalistic abandonment. Down but not quite out, he works his way towards Aran - first as a local news reporter on £5 a week in mining towns and villages in the Amman Valley in Wales. From there, he washes up in a condemned property at Waterloo on the Mersey shore in outer Liverpool and finally, aged twenty-one, finds himself in central London and the BBC’s Radio Newsroom at Broadcasting House.
After amassing enough money to keep him afloat on Inis Môr for a year, he sets out and, at the end of October 1968, he waved goodbye to a highly promising career, his colleagues, friends and even to his future wife: all to fulfil a dream he had when sixteen, first looking into J.M. Synge’s The Aran Islands, as if it was Chapman’s Homer and he John Keats.
Details
Details
ISBN: 9781843519195
Extent: 200
Published:
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Praise and Reviews
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‘McNeillie’s prose can be as pristine and effervescent as the sea’s edge on a summer beach…. a worthy addition to the canon, Aran is once again a larger place than it was.’ Tim Robinson, The Irish Times
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‘An Aran Keening marks out and occupies its own territory… it caught me in its spell.’ Tom Paulin
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'A free spirit, master storyteller and self-confessed quare fellow, Andrew McNeillie has written a tale laced with wit and passion of his trek from his native Wales via the BBC'S newsroom to a life on the Aran Islands. Every sentence of this superb book is a finely honed work of art.' - Terry Eagleton

About the Author
Andrew McNeillie was born in North Wales. He was Literature Editor at OUP for five years until May 2009 when Exeter University made him a Professor in their English Department, in Cornwall. This appointment centres round the magazine Archipelago, founded in 2007. His first collection of poems Nevermore (2000) was shortlisted for the Forward Prize for Best First Collection. His memoir An Aran Keening was published in 2001 by the Lilliput Press. A celebratory anthology, Archipelago: A Reader (2021), was published by the Lilliput Press.