Bobby Sands : writings from prison Bobby Sands ; foreword by Gerry Adams ; introduction by Seán MacBride.
Material type: TextPublication details: Dublin Mercier Press c1998.Description: 239 p. ; 22 cmISBN:- 185635220X
- Writings from prison
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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Books | JST Library General Stacks | DA<br>History of W Central Europe | DA 965.S26 SAN (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 97622 |
Browsing JST Library shelves, Shelving location: General Stacks, Collection: DA<br>History of W Central Europe Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
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DA 963 FAN Independent Ireland | DA963 FOS Luck and the Irish : | DA 965.D4 MAC Eamon de Valera, | DA 965.S26 SAN Bobby Sands : | DA 966.B36 ODO Kevin Barry and his time | DA 990.U452 MAC Hope deferred : | DA 990.U452 WIL The way i see it: |
"Bobby Sands was twenty-seven years old and sixty-six days on hunger strike when he died in the H Blocks of Long Kesh in Northern Ireland, on 5 May 1981. The young IRA Volunteer, who had spent the last nine years of his short life in prison, was world-famous by the time of his death, having been elected to the British parliament and having withstood political and moral pressures to abandon his fast.
The hunger strike was aimed at rebutting the British government's attempts to criminalize the struggle for Irish freedom by changing the status of Sands and his fellow cellmates from political to criminal status.".
"While behind bars, Sands secretly wrote on toilet paper and cigarette papers with the refill of a cheap pen that he kept hidden inside his body. These writings were then smuggled out of prison. With dry humor, they chart, in prose and poetry, a man's attempt to preserve his identity against freezing cold, unimaginable filth, appalling beatings and numbing boredom. He conjures up vividly the enclosed hell of Long Kesh, the harassment, and the humiliatingly invasive searches.
Bobby Sands and his comrades were gripped by an iron system that held them at torture-point and yet their courage never faltered."--BOOK JACKET.
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