Showing posts with label literature. Show all posts
Showing posts with label literature. Show all posts
Publishers Weekly 🔖  In Richard O’Rawe’s Northern Heist (Melville House, Apr.), James “Ructions” O’Hare and other former Irish Republican Army paramilitaries plan to rob the biggest bank in Belfast.

Matt Ellis

ME: Where did you get the idea for Northern Heist?

ROR: I always thought there was a great novel in the Northern Bank robbery in Belfast in 2004. It almost ended the Good Friday Agreement peace process, because the British and Irish governments said the IRA did it. I have no absolute proof, but the IRA was the only outfit in Ireland who had the expertise to pull off something so intricate. I thought it was a work of art.

Richard O’Rawe
Photo credit: Malachi O’Doherty
ME: What was the thinking behind your use of multiple points of view?

ROR: As important as it is to get into Ructions’s mindset, it’s also important to get in the other players’ minds. Ructions isn’t a saint; he’s an out-and-out villain. This is not a victimless crime. This was about real people who were caught up in this maelstrom of criminality and traumatized by it.

ME: What was your experience switching from nonfiction to fiction?

ROR: I found the whole process liberating—creating scenarios and saying if this happens, what’s the consequence? Sometimes I wouldn’t get it right. It wouldn’t be unusual to do six rewrites. It was like when I was at Long Kesh prison for political prisoners in Northern Ireland. I was interned there twice without trial. These guys would make Celtic harps, rubbing them down with rough sandpaper and then fine sandpaper until they got a fantastic sheen. Writing to me was like that. You’re always holding it, always making it better. You want every sentence to be unique, like nothing anyone else has read before. In In the Name of the Son, the book I wrote about Gerry Conlon, who was wrongly convicted and imprisoned as an IRA man, I had a few. I was describing his personality. Everybody loved him. He made friends all over the place. So, I wrote, “Gerry Conlon made friends like hillbillies made moonshine.” The night that I wrote that, I got drunk. I love that sort of creative writing in the middle of the story.

ME: What do you think is unique about Irish writers?

ROR: Irish writers, by and large, are quite tongue-in-cheek. They see beauty in things that most people don’t—beauty in people’s behavior. Irish writers try to insert humor into the most serious situations. In Northern Heist, I have a character, Ambrose Peoples, coming out onto the street with a lorry load of dough, and a preacher man on the corner says, “The wages of sin is death.” Ambrose says, “I don’t know. The wages of sin are great.”

Richard O'Rawe has authored several books the latest of which is Northern Heist.  

The Perfect Heist ➖ PW Talks with Richard O’Rawe

Tyler Wetherall on Why All in Prison Should Have the Right to Read.


When I was a teenager, my father and I shared books. We didn’t share the physical copy, at least not often—my dad was serving a ten-year sentence in California, and I was at school in Bath, England—but we did share the imaginary landscape offered within its pages, a place we could occupy together from afar.

I would find the books Dad was reading in my local library branch. Wilbur Smith’s The River God, Sophie’s Choice by William Styron, a handful of Michael Crichton novels—the books themselves didn’t matter. While I curled up with my library-stamped copy of The River God before bed, he was reading his, 5,000 miles away in his prison bunk. These words offered a point of connection between us, when there were few others to be found, and, for him, a touchstone to the world outside, the world he would one day rejoin …

… Some prisons have libraries, but they are woefully understocked, with books often shared amongst thousands and left threadbare. A former inmate told me that sometimes the final chapters of a prison library book had fallen out, which he would only discover, to his devastation, once he reached the end. People in low-security facilities and camps can receive books from their families and charities, but at most medium - and high-security facilities they must be sent directly from the publisher or bought from prison-affiliated vendors, often at prohibitive prices for those without an outside support network. For those in punitive segregation—who are in their cell for between 17 and 23 hours a day—there is, at best, a fortnightly book cart wheeled past the cell with a limit on the number of books the individual can take out. Operating a system of mass incarceration requires an act of aggressive dehumanization.

The situation is worse now than it was during my father’s incarceration in the 1990s.

Continue reading @ Literary Hub.

How Sharing Books With My Dad In Prison Made Life Bearable For Both Of Us

Rita Scott (RS) interviews author Seán MacEachaidh (SM) about his book, A Guide to the Silence of the Irish Other World. Thanks to TPQ's transcriber.





The Crypt
Westport Community Radio
WRFM 98.2
Uploaded to YouTube
19 August 2014


RS: You're listening to The Crypt and I would like to welcome my very special guest, Seán MacEachaidh, to the show. Seán is the author of A Guide to the Silence of the Irish Other World. So you're very welcome to the show, Seán.

SM: Thank you very much, Rita. A delight to be here.

RS: Thank you. Well firstly, could you give us a bit of background about yourself, Seán?

SM: A married man, four children, four grandsons, former president of the University of Ulster (student union) and currently an on-call worker – tourism - Heritage Advisor at Carrickfergus Castle and that's about it – for the moment.

The Crypt Explores the Other World