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Belfast Diary: War As a Way of Life
John Conroy
Beacon Pr
, 1987 - 218 pages
average customer review:
based on 24 reviews
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highly recommended
An indispensable account...
of what it is like to live, work and experience the turmoil of "The Troubles." Conroy covered the Troubles the right
way
...he went in and lived among the people in
Belfast instead
of swooping in for drive-by interviews like too many journalists have done in the past. He also manages to convey what he experienced while maintaining objectivity...this skill when dealing with terrorist and paramilitary violence is something writers covering the "
War
on Terror" these days could learn from. Required reading for anybody interested in Northern Ireland, its history and how to possibly make a better future in that wartorn nation...
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Necessary Read for the American Audience
This book was recommended to me as excellent reading about the Troubles, particularly for Americans. I whole-heartedly agree; it is all that and more. Conroy does describe the daily workings of
life
in Northern Ireland but he also tackles the prejudices and ignorance of Americans (and the U.S. government) when it comes to the political climate in Northern Ireland. He pulls no punches and sugar-coats no issues. He explicates the situation as he sees it and is not afraid to indict those who turn blind eyes. The version I read was older so I have not yet seen the updated book that includes information on semi-recent IRA ceasefires. But I do think many of Conroy's observations are still applicable, changes in administration notwithstanding. He describes the intolerant view to
wards Sinn
Fein taken by the American government in the 80s and the biased, oversimplified treatment of the Troubles by the American media. Indeed as Conroy notes it has not been hard to sell the British point-of-view to American audiences but what of the counterpoint? When do proponents of the other side get a chance? Conroy also concludes that for as long as Northern Ireland remains a British enclave, continued violence is guaranteed. For that reason alone, Americans owe it to themselves to read _
Belfast
Diary
_.
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Puts you right in the middle of it
Not only do I admire John Conroy's writing, but I admire his courage to put himself right in the middle of 'the troubles' just to get the story right. It would one thing if Conroy was a
Belfast resident
and was just reporting on his day to day
life
, but he is not. He is an American who more or less stumbled upon this assignment and saw it through.
It struck me a few times in the book just how close Conroy was coming to being killed in a place where death is a
way
of life. He is to be commended for this and we owe a debt of gratitude for making this sacrifice just so we could get a look right from the belly of the beast.
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Gritty Eye-witness Account of The Troubles
John Conroy performed a courageous feat of journalism with this book. As an American writer he put himself in the midst of the conflict and in incredible danger at times to capture the true picture of
Belfast
in the 80's. The stories of the people he encountered and the tough environment he experienced and witnessed is indispensible reading for anyone who wants to understand what the conflict was all about at the street level.
While Belfast seems to be enjoying more peaceful times at the moment this book is a reminder of just how volatile a political climate there is and provides the reader with a much fuller understanding of the how , the why and major developments in the Troubles in Northern Ireland.
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Great read
I really enjoyed this book. I thought that Conroy did a great job putting the 'Troubles' in
Belfast into
perspective from an American living in the midst of it all. Having visted the area that he writes of brought back memories. I referred to his map at least 50 times during my reading of the book to recall the streets that I walked in relation to where he wrote the book and spent his time in Belfast. I highly recommend this book.
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A street-level view of the twenty-five-year conflict in Northern Ireland. "For those puzzled by Northern Ireland,
Belfast
Diary offers
a wellwritten, sympathetic and cleareyed view."
-The New York Times Book Review
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