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The #1 Irish Times bestseller WINNER of the An Post Irish Book
Awards 'A clear-eyed, myth-dispelling masterpiece' Marian Keyes
'Sweeping, authoritative and profoundly intelligent' Colm Toibin,
Guardian 'With the pace and twists of an enthralling novel' Irish
Times 'Evocative, moving, funny and furious' Dominic Sandbrook,
Sunday Times 'An enthralling, panoramic book' Patrick Radden Keefe
'A book that will remain important for a very long time' An Post
Irish Book Award We Don't Know Ourselves is a very personal vision
of recent Irish history from the year of O'Toole's birth, 1958,
down to the present. Ireland has changed almost out of recognition
during those decades, and Fintan O'Toole's life coincides with that
arc of transformation. The book is a brilliant interweaving of
memories (though this is emphatically not a memoir) and engrossing
social and historical narrative. This was the era of Eamon de
Valera, Jack Lynch, Charles Haughey and John Charles McQuaid, of
sectarian civil war in the North and the Pope's triumphant visit in
1979, but also of those who began to speak out against the ruling
consensus - feminists, advocates for the rights of children, gay
men and women coming out of the shadows. We Don't Know Ourselves is
an essential book for anyone who wishes to understand modern
Ireland.
Life and death in a modern hospital, from Seamus O'Mahony, the
award-winning author of The Way We Die Now and Can Medicine Be
Cured? Seamus O'Mahony charts the realities of work in the
'ministry of bodies', that huge complex where people come to be
cured and to die. From unexpected deaths to moral quandaries and
bureaucratic disasters, O'Mahony documents life in the halls and
wards that all of us will visit at some point in our lives with his
characteristic wit and dry and unsentimental intelligence. Absurd
general emails, vain and self-promoting specialists, the relentless
parade of self-destructive drinkers and drug users, the comical
expectations of baffled patients: this is not a conventional
medical memoir, but the collective biography of one of our great
modern institutions - the general hospital - through the eyes of a
brilliant writer, who happens to be a doctor.
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