Description

Book Synopsis

The memoir of the 'Brighton Bomber', Patrick Magee



Trade Review

'An important book ... Only by hearing such voices will we shape our understanding into some kind of order and reconciliation'

-- Irish Times

'I read this book with total fascination. Different countries, different conflicts, Pat the bomber and I the bombed - yet how extraordinarily similar, intense, complex and healing the experience of reaching out to the hated 'enemy' had been for both of us'

-- Albie Sachs, former judge on the Constitutional Court of South Africa and chief architect of the post-apartheid constitution

'Magee’s narrative is calm and collected; analytical and poetic ... His emotional desire for reconciliation comes across as genuine and heartfelt'

-- Counterpunch

'Patrick Magee is a fine example of a human being making his way through an acute crisis. He and Jo Berry managed to transform the aftermath of a severe conflict into a profoundly useful form of communication. They both deserve our respect and admiration for this'

-- Scilla Elworthy, founder of the Oxford Research Group, co-founder of Peace Direct and three-time nominee for the Nobel Peace Prize

'A vivid, deeply personal account of why a young, unassuming man became a volunteer in the IRA, risked his life and sacrificed his freedom, to take on not just the British military in Belfast's ghettoes but in the lion's den itself'

-- Danny Morrison, Secretary of the Bobby Sands Trust and author of All the Dead Voices (Mercier Press, 2002)

‘Compelling … Pat’s exploration of his journey into republican politics, of life as an IRA volunteer, as a political prisoner and the consequences of the armed actions he participated in, provide an important alternative narrative to that often presented by others’

-- Gerry Adams, former President of Sinn Fein

'Not many autobiographies show an author feeling his way through his life, seeking to understand each phase of it. This one does'

-- Andersonstown News

'A treatise on processes of responsibility, grieving and reconciliation'

-- Red Pepper

‘A fascinating read’

-- Sunday Times

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements
Foreword by Jo Berry
Introduction
1. Trace Memories
2. The Politics of Place
3. Unity Flats
4. Joining G Company
5. Capture and the Lazy K
6. Back to War
7. Burnout
8. Recommitment
9. Nineteen Eighty-Four
10. Capture and Trial
11. Life X 8
12. Gate Fever
13. My God! Him Too?
14. Bridges Can Be Built
15. Facing the Enemy
16. The F Word
17. The Field of Peace
18. Postscript
Index

Where Grieving Begins

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    RRP £20.00 – you save £2.00 (10%)

    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Thu 18 Jun 2026.

    A Hardback by Patrick Magee

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      View other formats and editions of Where Grieving Begins by Patrick Magee

      Publisher: Pluto Press
      Publication Date: 20/02/2021
      ISBN13: 9780745341774, 978-0745341774
      ISBN10: 0745341772

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      The memoir of the 'Brighton Bomber', Patrick Magee



      Trade Review

      'An important book ... Only by hearing such voices will we shape our understanding into some kind of order and reconciliation'

      -- Irish Times

      'I read this book with total fascination. Different countries, different conflicts, Pat the bomber and I the bombed - yet how extraordinarily similar, intense, complex and healing the experience of reaching out to the hated 'enemy' had been for both of us'

      -- Albie Sachs, former judge on the Constitutional Court of South Africa and chief architect of the post-apartheid constitution

      'Magee’s narrative is calm and collected; analytical and poetic ... His emotional desire for reconciliation comes across as genuine and heartfelt'

      -- Counterpunch

      'Patrick Magee is a fine example of a human being making his way through an acute crisis. He and Jo Berry managed to transform the aftermath of a severe conflict into a profoundly useful form of communication. They both deserve our respect and admiration for this'

      -- Scilla Elworthy, founder of the Oxford Research Group, co-founder of Peace Direct and three-time nominee for the Nobel Peace Prize

      'A vivid, deeply personal account of why a young, unassuming man became a volunteer in the IRA, risked his life and sacrificed his freedom, to take on not just the British military in Belfast's ghettoes but in the lion's den itself'

      -- Danny Morrison, Secretary of the Bobby Sands Trust and author of All the Dead Voices (Mercier Press, 2002)

      ‘Compelling … Pat’s exploration of his journey into republican politics, of life as an IRA volunteer, as a political prisoner and the consequences of the armed actions he participated in, provide an important alternative narrative to that often presented by others’

      -- Gerry Adams, former President of Sinn Fein

      'Not many autobiographies show an author feeling his way through his life, seeking to understand each phase of it. This one does'

      -- Andersonstown News

      'A treatise on processes of responsibility, grieving and reconciliation'

      -- Red Pepper

      ‘A fascinating read’

      -- Sunday Times

      Table of Contents

      Acknowledgements
      Foreword by Jo Berry
      Introduction
      1. Trace Memories
      2. The Politics of Place
      3. Unity Flats
      4. Joining G Company
      5. Capture and the Lazy K
      6. Back to War
      7. Burnout
      8. Recommitment
      9. Nineteen Eighty-Four
      10. Capture and Trial
      11. Life X 8
      12. Gate Fever
      13. My God! Him Too?
      14. Bridges Can Be Built
      15. Facing the Enemy
      16. The F Word
      17. The Field of Peace
      18. Postscript
      Index

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