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Winter 2025 Review of Books

Winter 2025 Review of Books

By Darina Molloy

Winter 2025

January 9, 2026 by Leave a Comment

Reviews by Darina Molloy She Died Young: A Life in Fragments  / By Brenda Fricker Brenda Fricker had a tough life, there’s no doubt about it. Maybe that’s why she chose the approach she did for her memoir – it’s more a selection of linked anecdotes and musing about her eight decades, rather than a chronological blow-by-blow account of what happened in exactly what order. It … [Read more...] about Winter 2025 Review of Books

Heroes of the Revolution

By Irish America Staff

Winter 2025

January 9, 2026 by 1 Comment

As the 250th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence approaches,  Edythe Preet looks to March 17, 1776, and the role the Irish played in America’s  bid for freedom. Pop quiz: what color ink is used to sign legislative bills into law? If you answered black, you’d be right with one exception. On March 12, 1941 Massachusetts Governor Leverett Saltonstall … [Read more...] about Heroes of the Revolution

Sea Voyages With Father

By Annie Burke

Winter 2025

January 9, 2026 by Leave a Comment

Annie Burke shares memories of how her father, Jim Burke, helped her overcome childhood respiratory illness.  My son, Jim, has been after me to write down some of the remembrances of my father I’ve shared with him over the years. Before it’s too late, I’m sure he’s thinking. He keeps referring to an old, faded photograph of a group of refinery workers. It’s one of the few I … [Read more...] about Sea Voyages With Father

From Japan to Philly, a Global Gaelic Revival

By Tom Deignan

Winter 2025

January 9, 2026 by Leave a Comment

Michael von Siegel and Naoise Ó Cairealláin don’t have much in common. Von Siegel grew up in Landsdowne, outside of Philadelphia, while Ó Cairealláin was born across the Atlantic in Belfast. Both, however, have a distinct and passionate interest in the Irish language. Just like a lot of folks these days. “There’s so many meet-up groups now in the Philly area,” von Siegel … [Read more...] about From Japan to Philly, a Global Gaelic Revival

Irish Eye on Hollywood

By Tom Deignan

Winter 2025

January 9, 2026 by Leave a Comment

By Tom Deignan Maggie’s Oscar Moment? Academy Award nominations were just announced and it looks like the March 15 ceremonies will have a distinctly Irish flavor – though not as much as it should! Jessie Buckley, who earned a Golden Globe in the Best Actress category for her powerful role as Agnes Hathaway in Hamnet, is  nominated for an Academy Award for the same role. … [Read more...] about Irish Eye on Hollywood

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May 13, 1842

The composer Arthur Sullivan was born in London to an Irish Italian mother, Mary Coughan and Irish-born father, Thomas Sullivan. Sullivan composed his first anthem at age 8. At age 14, he was awarded a scholarship to the London Academy of Music. Sullivan began a collaboration with W.S. Gilbert to create the comic opera “Thespis.” He would work with Giblert on fourteen light operas in all, including The Pirates of Penzance and the Mikado. Sullivan’s “Irish Symphony” was first performed in March 1866. He wrote it on holiday in Ireland: “As I was jolting home through wind and rain… in an open jaunting-car, the whole first movement of a symphony came into my head with a real Irish flavor about it – besides scraps of the other movements.”

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