KittylandA classic and hilarious coming of age tale of college life in the Irish university town of Galway follows a group of West of Ireland students in the mid 1980s, in the days before hope and the Celtic Tiger. Follow them on their journey through three years of baked beans, debauchery, emigration, drink, sex, and rock and roll. No student should ever go to college in Galway without first reading Kittyland.
A rural Irish village is transfixed when anonymous lottery winner offers to fund the development of a long-delayed community centre. But the gathering of characters who are thrown together by this quirk of fortune reveal old sores that had never healed in the life of this Galway village.
KittylandA classic and hilarious coming of age tale of college life in the Irish university town of Galway follows a group of West of Ireland students in the mid 1980s, in the days before hope and the Celtic Tiger. Follow them on their journey through three years of baked beans, debauchery, emigration, drink, sex, and rock and roll. No student should ever go to college in Galway without first reading Kittyland.
A rural Irish village is transfixed when anonymous lottery winner offers to fund the development of a long-delayed community centre. But the gathering of characters who are thrown together by this quirk of fortune reveal old sores that had never healed in the life of this Galway village.
NightmusicMalachy Lee is a seemingly innocuous Galway fisherman who loves Mozart and Sherlock Holmes. Noel Fogarty is an unappreciated garda who does not like playing by the rules. And bodies are being washed up from the river. Nightmusic is a fast moving thriller set against a heady Galway summer.
Roy Johnston and Declan Plummer provide a refreshing portrait of Belfast in the nineteenth century. Based on an impressive array of contemporary sources, with deep and detailed attention especially to contemporary newspapers they reveal a picture of sustained vitality and development that justifies Belfast’s prominent place the history of nineteenth-century musical culture in Ireland and more broadly in the British Isles.
How Thor Lost his Thunder is the first major English-language study of early medieval evidence for the Old Norse god, Thor. In this book, the most common modern representations of Thor are examined, such as images of him wreathed in lightning, and battling against monsters and giants. The origins of these images within Iron Age and early medieval evidence are then uncovered and investigated. In doing so, the common cultural history of Thor’s cult and mythology is explored and some of his lesser known traits are revealed, including a possible connection to earthquakes and volcanic eruptions in Iceland. This geographically and chronologically far-reaching study considers the earliest sources in which Thor appears, including in evidence from the Viking colonies of the British Isles and in Scandinavian folklore. Through tracing the changes and variety that has occurred in Old Norse mythology over time, this book provokes a questioning of the fundamental popular and scholarly beliefs about Thor for the first time since the Victorian era, including whether he really was a thunder god and whether worshippers truly believed they would encounter him in the afterlife. Considering evidence from across northern Europe, How Thor Lost his Thunder challenges modern scholarship’s understanding of the god and of the northern pantheon as a whole and is ideal for scholars and students of mythology, and the history and religion of medieval Scandinavia.
Thank you for visiting our website. Would you like to provide feedback on how we could improve your experience?
This site does not use any third party cookies with one exception — it uses cookies from Google to deliver its services and to analyze traffic.Learn More.