One Belfast Boy

Author:   Patricia McMahon ,  Alan O'Connor
Publisher:   Houghton Mifflin
ISBN:  

9780395686201


Pages:   54
Publication Date:   26 March 1999
Recommended Age:   From 10 to 12 years
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
Limited stock is available. It will be ordered for you and shipped pending supplier's limited stock.

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One Belfast Boy


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Overview

"Eleven-year-old Liam Leathem lives in Belfast, Northern Ireland.He happens to be Catholic, but his story might be the same no matter what his religion.He has never known a Protestant person in all his life.In Northern Ireland the Protestant and Catholic children live on separate sides of the ""peace walls"" - high walls dividing neighborhoods, built to help keep the peace.Liam's greatest joy in life is boxing.He spends nearly all his free time at the Holy Trinity Boxing Club, where he trains with his coaches and other young boxers.Despite the presence of tension and conflict around him, the sound of military helicopters whirring overhead, and the sight of soldiers in the street, Liam tries to live his life without being drawn into the conflict.In both pictures and words, McMahon and O'Connor have captured the innocence of a childhood lived in the shadow of a violence handed down for generations."

Full Product Details

Author:   Patricia McMahon ,  Alan O'Connor
Publisher:   Houghton Mifflin
Imprint:   Houghton Mifflin (Trade)
Weight:   0.476kg
ISBN:  

9780395686201


ISBN 10:   0395686202
Pages:   54
Publication Date:   26 March 1999
Recommended Age:   From 10 to 12 years
Audience:   Children/juvenile ,  Primary & secondary/elementary & high school ,  Children / Juvenile ,  Primary
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Out of Stock Indefinitely
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
Limited stock is available. It will be ordered for you and shipped pending supplier's limited stock.

Table of Contents

Reviews

This slice-of-life photo essay follows eleven-year-old Liam as he attends school, spends time with his family, and intensely prepares for a boxing match. That Liam is a Catholic boy living in a city long divided by 'the Troubles' is evident throughout the present-tense text and in the sharp color photos, but the book's emphasis is on how normal childhood activities abide, even when restricted and somewhat shaped by social conflict. Horn Book<br><br>It's hard for most US readers to imagine what it is like to grow up amid ongoing violence, but that is what Liam's life has been in Belfast. However, this 11-year-old's family life, school, and dreams will be known to children everywhere. After providing an overview of the Troubles, ' McMahon movingly describes the conditions of Liam's existence: a Catholic, he has never known a Protestantpeace walls' separate the Catholic and Protestant sections of Belfast. On his way to school, Liam passes buildings with large messages painted on them: Brits Out, ' or No Surrender.' Family and school conversations often include passing references to a bomb going off. O'Connor's full-color photographs show all the aspects of Liam's life, including his training for a boxing match; the boy loses, but rather than believe that the judges ruled against him because of where he's from, he quotes a rule he has learnedWe win, or we lose. Then we go on.' This book provides a realistic glimpse of a place where peace has taken a fragile hold, and offers a reminder that the dreams of children can flourish amid misery.<br>Kirkus Reviews


This slice-of-life photo essay follows eleven-year-old Liam as he attends school, spends time with his family, and intensely prepares for a boxing match. That Liam is a Catholic boy living in a city long divided by 'the Troubles' is evident throughout the present-tense text and in the sharp color photos, but the book's emphasis is on how normal childhood activities abide, even when restricted and somewhat shaped by social conflict. Horn Book It's hard for most US readers to imagine what it is like to grow up amid ongoing violence, but that is what Liam's life has been in Belfast. However, this 11-year-old's family life, school, and dreams will be known to children everywhere. After providing an overview of the Troubles, ' McMahon movingly describes the conditions of Liam's existence: a Catholic, he has never known a Protestantpeace walls' separate the Catholic and Protestant sections of Belfast. On his way to school, Liam passes buildings with large messages painted on them: Brits Out, ' or No Surrender.' Family and school conversations often include passing references to a bomb going off. O'Connor's full-color photographs show all the aspects of Liam's life, including his training for a boxing match; the boy loses, but rather than believe that the judges ruled against him because of where he's from, he quotes a rule he has learnedWe win, or we lose. Then we go on.' This book provides a realistic glimpse of a place where peace has taken a fragile hold, and offers a reminder that the dreams of children can flourish amid misery.Kirkus Reviews


This slice-of-life photo essay follows eleven-year-old Liam as he attends school, spends time with his family, and intensely prepares for a boxing match. That Liam is a Catholic boy living in a city long divided by 'the Troubles' is evident throughout the present-tense text and in the sharp color photos, but the book's emphasis is on how normal childhood activities abide, even when restricted and somewhat shaped by social conflict. Horn BookIt's hard for most US readers to imagine what it is like to grow up amid ongoing violence, but that is what Liam's life has been in Belfast. However, this 11-year-old's family life, school, and dreams will be known to children everywhere. After providing an overview of the Troubles, ' McMahon movingly describes the conditions of Liam's existence: a Catholic, he has never known a Protestantpeace walls' separate the Catholic and Protestant sections of Belfast. On his way to school, Liam passes buildings with large messages painted on them: Brits Out, ' or No Surrender.' Family and school conversations often include passing references to a bomb going off. O'Connor's full-color photographs show all the aspects of Liam's life, including his training for a boxing match; the boy loses, but rather than believe that the judges ruled against him because of where he's from, he quotes a rule he has learnedWe win, or we lose. Then we go on.' This book provides a realistic glimpse of a place where peace has taken a fragile hold, and offers a reminder that the dreams of children can flourish amid misery.Kirkus Reviews


This slice-of-life photo essay follows eleven-year-old Liam as he attends school, spends time with his family, and intensely prepares for a boxing match. That Liam is a Catholic boy living in a city long divided by ''the Troubles'' is evident throughout the present-tense text and in the sharp color photos, but the book's emphasis is on how normal childhood activities abide, even when restricted and somewhat shaped by social conflict.


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