Download Blood-Dark Track by Joseph O’Neill (.ePUB)

Blood-Dark Track: A Family History by Joseph O’Neill
Requirements: ePUB Reader, 4.1 MB
Overview: In a literary age awash with father-fixation, Joseph O’Neill goes back a generation to recall the lives of not just one but both his grandfathers. This is not mere indulgence: their experiences connect beyond their mutual grandson, and bear comparison with each other. On the one side was Joseph Dakad, a Christian Turk living in the port of Mersin, running a hotel and an import-export business. Jim O’Neill was a Corkman with a fiercely republican heart, who supplemented his graft with salmon poaching. Both grew up among conflict and prejudice, and both suffered at the hands of the British in the Second World War: Joseph was imprisoned as a spy in British-controlled Palestine after a misconceived business trip to import lemons, while Jim was interned in the Curragh as an IRA terrorist. However, the circumstantial meat, or fruit in Joseph’s case, of their lives in these famously hospitable, yet divided, countries had remained shrouded by a veil of silence for decades.

While the impressively researched detail owes much to his legal training, O’Neill reconstructs his grandfathers’ lives with the literary flair of the talented novelist he also is (The Breezes, and This is the Life), yet without ever losing sight of contemporary contexts such as the Good Friday Agreement, and the continuing turmoil in the Middle East. As an outsider with an “in”, the conclusions he draws are subtle, profound, and in places bravely troubling, such as when considering the assassination of Protestants by Catholic extremists in the Irish Republic, and the Turkish massacre of the Armenians, of which each man respectively probably had knowledge. In identifying the unavoidable political stitch in the personal weave, though, he seeks to free both men from their exile in silence, if only, as he conjectures with admirable self-scrutiny, to perhaps “lock them up in words as a punishment for the hurt silence which they’d bequeathed my parents”. The sense, however, in this splendid account, is of liberation; both of their stories, and from a silence that speaks louder than words could ever imprison.
Genre: Memoir, Biography, Society, Politics ; Philosophy.

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