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In her wildly acclaimed new novel Claire Kilroy creates an
unforgettable heroine, whose fierce love for her young son clashes with
the seismic change to her own identity.
As her marriage strains and she struggles with questions of love,
autonomy, creativity and the passing of time, an old friend makes a
welcome return - but can he really offer a lifeline to the woman she
used to be?
Unlike some other reproductions of classic texts (1) We have not
used OCR(Optical Character Recognition), as this leads to bad
quality books with introduced typos. (2) In books where there are
images such as portraits, maps, sketches etc We have endeavoured to
keep the quality of these images, so they represent accurately the
original artefact. Although occasionally there may be certain
imperfections with these old texts, we feel they deserve to be made
available for future generations to enjoy.
The Big Chapel was shortlisted for the 1971 Booker Prize and winner
of 1971 the Guardian Fiction Prize. It is a novel about a man, a
family and a town. Basing his work upon a notorious clerical
scandal of Victorian Ireland, Thomas Kilroy has written an anatomy
of religious violence that remains relevant. In scenes that range
from the private and lyrical to the panorama of a whole community
in convulsion he draws upon a deep knowledge of the history and
folklore of nineteenth-century Ireland. While there is a great deal
of humour in The Big Chapel it is, finally, a work of grave tragic
proportions. It is the characters however that remain longest in
the memory. Father Lannigan, the anguished demagogue, the man
haunted by the implications of his own revolution. Emerine Scully,
a man unable to choose, at a time when all men are faced by choice.
And Horace Percy Butler, landlord and amateur scientist, a comic,
tragic character who is quite unlike anyone else in Irish fiction.
The novel is punctuated with extracts from Butler's journal which
is itself a remarkable tour de force.
Knowing how to use Facebook to network and market yourself or your
business gives a single person unlimited potential for reaching
over 1 billion users in 60 countries. This tool will show you how
to manage the marketing on your personal profile and business
pages. Authored by an expert and consultant in cutting edge
marketing strategies, this well-rounded guide will immediately
change the way you use Facebook and the way you market your
business. 6-page laminated guide includes: Profile vs. Page Your
Personal Facebook Profile Networking How Facebook Can Benefit
Businesses & Brands Your Business's Facebook Page Facebook
Advertising Options Creating Calls to Action on Your Page How to
Manage a Page with Multiple Admins How to Schedule Posts Facebook
Apps Contests & Promotions Incorporate Facebook into Your
Overall Marketing Strategy Helpful Resources within Facebook
Reintegration programmes for ex-combatants are supposed to support
the wider peace process. This study, based on detailed fieldwork,
looks at the way they were carried out in Sierra Leone and Liberia
and assesses the degree to which they were conducted in a
participatory way.
Improvisation the Michael Chekhov Way: Active Exploration of Acting
Techniques provides readers with dozens of improvisational
exercises based on the acting techniques of Michael Chekhov. The
book features key exercises that will help the actor explore
improvisation and expand their imagination through the technique.
Exercises that have been successfully taught for decades via the
intensive trainings from the National Michael Chekhov Association
are now clearly laid out in this book, along with information on
how these performance-based techniques can be applied to a script
and even provide life benefits. Guidance on how to use the
exercises both in a group setting and as an individual is provided,
as well as tools for lesson plans for up to a year of actor
training. These step-by-step exercises will allow readers to expand
their range of expression, discover the joy of creating unique
characters, improve stage presence and presentation skills, and
find new, creative ways to look at life. Improvisation the Michael
Chekhov Way is written to be used both by individual actor
practitioners and in group settings, such as Acting or
Improvisation courses.
This book marks the centenary of Marcel Duchamp's Fountain by
critically re-examining the established interpretation of the work.
It introduces a new methodological approach to art-historical
practice rooted in a revised understanding of Lacan, Freud and
Slavoj Zizek. In weaving an alternative narrative, Kilroy shows us
that not only has Fountain been fundamentally misunderstood but
that this very misunderstanding is central to the work's
significance. The author brings together Duchamp's own statements
to argue Fountain's verdict was strategically stage-managed by the
artist in order to expose the underlying logic of its reception,
what he terms 'The Creative Act.' This book will be of interest to
a broad range of readers, including art historians, psychoanalysts,
scholars and art enthusiasts interested in visual culture and
ideological critique.
The novel is the literary form that most extensively informs us of
nineteenth-century English culture: not its realities but the
ideologies that shaped social beliefs. Fiction not only reflects
ideologies; it participates in their formation and modification.
But ideologies shift rapidly - more than actualities of personal or
social life, making the form of the novel shift accordingly.
Consideration of four pairs of English novels, each of which
extensively treats the most critical issue of the period - the
survival of the family - shows how changes in ideology prompted
fundamental revisions of fictional techniques and structures.
Improvisation the Michael Chekhov Way: Active Exploration of Acting
Techniques provides readers with dozens of improvisational
exercises based on the acting techniques of Michael Chekhov. The
book features key exercises that will help the actor explore
improvisation and expand their imagination through the technique.
Exercises that have been successfully taught for decades via the
intensive trainings from the National Michael Chekhov Association
are now clearly laid out in this book, along with information on
how these performance-based techniques can be applied to a script
and even provide life benefits. Guidance on how to use the
exercises both in a group setting and as an individual is provided,
as well as tools for lesson plans for up to a year of actor
training. These step-by-step exercises will allow readers to expand
their range of expression, discover the joy of creating unique
characters, improve stage presence and presentation skills, and
find new, creative ways to look at life. Improvisation the Michael
Chekhov Way is written to be used both by individual actor
practitioners and in group settings, such as Acting or
Improvisation courses.
Charles Young served as the highest-ranking African American
officer in the U.S. Army until 1917. During his career, he served
on the western frontier, in the Philippines, and in Mexico, and as
military attache to both Haiti and Liberia. Young was also an
accomplished linguist, a musician and composer, a published author,
and an active member of the black intelligentsia. A history of
Young's life transcends the fields of military, diplomatic, and
African American history. For those interested in the history of
the United States between Reconstruction and World War I, his life
offers a guided tour through one of the most important epochs in
the American experience. Charles Young's career was shaped by race.
The army regarded him as an anomaly and sought to limit his
visibility. He, on the other hand, used his profile to promote the
cause of racial equality. As a soldier, he was diligent in his
observance of duty. As a citizen, he was committed to the cause of
black civil rights. For Charles Young, success was more than a
personal dream, it was an obligation to his people. Young's
ultimate goal was to attain the rank of general. Thus, his forced
retirement on medical grounds in 1917 was a crushing blow, and, for
him and his supporters, bore testament to the racism that permeated
the armed forces and America.
Here is the gripping account of a wholesome American family which
elected to turn a son's tragic death as a human sacrifice into a
positive program to fight substance abuse.
Many scholars have been calling for a new edition of Sir John
Harington's Epigrams. Gerard Kilroy, using the three manuscripts
arranged and revised by the author, offers the first complete text
in print of Harington's four hundred Epigrams, uncovers Harington's
elaborate design of forty theological decades, and restores the
emblems and political elegies that Harington uses to frame his
complete collection and define its serious purpose.
The death of Edmund Campion in 1581 marked a disjunction between
the world of printed untruth and private, handwritten, truth in
early modern England. Gerard Kilroy traces the circulation of
manuscripts connected with Campion to reveal a fascinating network
that not only stretched from the Court to Warwickshire and East
Anglia but also crossed the confessional boundaries. Kilroy shows
that in this intricate web Sir John Harington was a key figure,
using his disguise as a wit to conceal a lifelong dedication to
Campion's memory. Sir Thomas Tresham is shown as expressing his
devotion to Campion both in his coded buildings and in a previously
unpublished manuscript, Bodleian MS Eng. th. b. 1-2, whose
theological and cultural riches are here fully explored. This book
provides startling new views about Campion's literary, historical
and cultural impact in early modern England. The great strength of
this study is its exploitation of archival manuscript sources,
offering the first printed text and translation of Campion's
Virgilian epic, a fully collated text of 'Why doe I use my paper,
ynke and pen', and Harington's four decades of theological
epigrams, printed for the first time in the order he so carefully
designed. Edmund Campion: Memory and Transcription lays the
foundations of the first full literary assessment of Campion the
scholar, the impact he had on the literature of early modern
England, and the long legacy in manuscript writing.
There was a crooked man and he walked a crooked mile He made a
crooked deal and he blew a crooked pile He dug a crooked hole And
he sank the crooked isle And they all went to hell in a stew of
crooked bile. The Devil I Know is a thrilling novel of greed and
hubris, set against the backdrop of a brewing international debt
crisis. Told by Tristram, in the form of a mysterious testimony, it
recounts his return home after a self-imposed exile only to find
himself trapped as a middle man played on both sides - by a
grotesque builder he's known since childhood on the one hand, and a
shadowy businessman he's never met on the other. Caught between
them, as an overblown property development begins in his home town
of Howth, it follows Tristram's dawning realisation that all is not
well. From a writer unafraid to take risks, The Devil I Know is a
bold, brilliant and disturbing piece of storytelling.
Anna Hunt has lost her memory and is on the run. From who and what
she is unsure, but trapped in the present she seems certain of only
one thing - she is somehow linked to the stolen painting currently
being restored in the National Gallery. In a wonderfully unsettling
first novel, Claire Kilroy manages to combine beautiful, poetic
prose with the menacing atmosphere of a thriller as she explores
themes of memory, violence, art and escape. 'A compelling read. The
surprises are real and yet so subtly tracked . . . It's a thriller,
a confession and a love story framed by a meditation on the arts.'
Margaret Reynolds, The Times
Edmund Campion: A Scholarly Life is the response, at long last, to
Evelyn Waugh's call, in 1935, for a 'scholarly biography' to
replace Richard Simpson's Edmund Campion (1867). Whereas early
accounts of his life focused on the execution of the Jesuit priest,
this new biography presents a more balanced assessment, placing
equal weight on Campion's London upbringing among printers and
preachers, and on his growing stature as an orator in an Oxford
riven with religious divisions. Ireland, chosen by Campion as a
haven from religious conflict, is shown, paradoxically, to have
determined his life and his death. Gerard Kilroy here draws on
newly discovered manuscript sources to reveal Campion as a
charismatic and affectionate scholar who was finding fulfilment as
priest and teacher in Prague when he was summoned to lead the first
Jesuit mission to England. The book argues that the delays in his
long journey suggest reluctant acceptance, even before he was told
that Dr Nicholas Sander had brought 'holy war' to Ireland, so that
Campion landed in an England that was preparing for papal invasion.
The book offers fresh insights into the dramatic search for
Campion, the populist nature of the disputations in the Tower, and
the legal issues raised by his torture. It was the monarchical
republic itself that, in pursuit of the Anjou marriage, made him
the beloved 'champion' of the English Catholic community. Edmund
Campion: A Scholarly Life presents the most detailed and
comprehensive picture to date of an historical figure whose loyalty
and courage, in the trial and on the scaffold, swiftly became
legendary across Europe.
Through analysis of eight English novels of the Nineteenth century,
this work explores the ways in which the novel contributes to the
formation of ideology regarding the family, and, conversely, the
ways in which changing attitudes toward the family shape and
reshape the novel.
Remove your doubts about AI and explore how this technology can be
future-proofed using blockchain's smart contracts and
tamper-evident ledgers. With this practical book, system
architects, software engineers, and systems solution specialists
will learn how enterprise blockchain provides permanent provenance
of AI, removes the mystery, and allows you to validate AI before
it's ever used. Authors Karen Kilroy, Deepak Bhatta, and Lynn Riley
explain that, while it sounds exciting, AI's ability to change
itself through program synthesis could take the technology beyond
human control. With this book, you'll learn an efficient way to
solve this problem by building simple blockchain controls for
verifying, tracking, tracing, auditing, and even reversing AI.
Learn how to create and power AI marketplaces with blockchain
Understand why and how to implement on-chain AI governance Control
AI by learning methods to tether it to blockchain networks Use
blockchain cryptoanchors to detect common AI hacks Learn methods
for reversing tethered AI
According to Thomas Kilroy, his captivating memoir materialized in
response to a cataract operation in 2006, shocking his memory into
being and imparting him with a uniquely tactile and sensuous
perception of his own past. Over the Backyard Wall describes a
coming of age embodied by escape, self-discovery and a struggle to
contend with the rigid culture of a small Irish town in Co.
Kilkenny during WWII, with parents representing both sides of the
civil war conflict of the 1920s. He describes encounters with
fellow Kilkenny artists Tony O’Malley and Hubert Butler, and
writers such as Flannery O’Connor during his tour of the southern
US states in the 1950s. In keeping with Kilroy’s previous works,
Over the Backyard Wall utilizes the silences of the past to
liberate the imagination, making use of social and political
history to reinvigorate the shard-like nature of his own narrative
memory.
Eva Tyne, an Irish violinist living and working in New York,
collapses after her solo debut and is rushed to hospital. Still
dazed after the incident, she finds herself embarked on a chaotic
and dangerous odyssey. Leaving her steady partner, she quickly
falls in love with a mysterious man, and shortly thereafter comes
across a rare violin of dubious provenance, for which she must
raise the required payment in cash in less than a week. But,
haunted by the ghost of her father, racked with jealousy, and
unsure whom she can trust around her, Eva soon finds herself
playing a desperate psychological game as her desires threaten to
destroy her. Narratated in Eva's unforgettable voice - at once
passionate and unreliable - Tenderwire is a novel of immense pace
and skill, a guessing game and a whodunnit that surprises at every
turn.
**AVAILABLE FOR PRE-ORDER NOW** A resonant and provocative novel
about motherhood from the prize-winning author of The Devil I Know
and Tenderwire. 'Compelling . . This is a scorching read. I could
not put it down.' ANNE ENRIGHT 'Soldier Sailor is the most
uncompromising, provocative novel I've read in quite some time. . .
As honest as fiction gets.' JOHN BOYNE 'A blistering account of
that twilit zone of early motherhood.' JANE FEAVER Well, Sailor.
Here we are once more, you and me in one another's arms. The Earth
rotates beneath us and all is well, for now. . . In her first novel
for over a decade, Claire Kilroy takes us deep into the early days
of motherhood. Exploring the clash of fierce love for a new life
with a seismic change in identity, she vividly realises the raw,
tumultuous emotions of a new mother, as her marriage strains and
she struggles with questions of love, autonomy and creativity. As
she smiles at her baby, Sailor, while mentally composing her own
suicide note, an old friend makes a welcome return, but can he
really offer a lifeline to the woman she used to be?
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