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OUT OF IRELAND by Marian O’Shea Wernicke

OUT OF IRELAND

by Marian O’Shea Wernicke

Pub Date: April 25th, 2023
ISBN: 9781647423995
Publisher: She Writes Press

Wernicke presents an Irish immigration novel inspired by stories of her great-grandmother.

It’s 1867 in Bantry Bay, Ireland. Sixteen-year-old Eileen O’Donovan is daydreaming atop a branch of a large oak tree, her eyes fixed upon the gathering dark clouds and the building sea. Thirteen years ago, her father died working the fields of their small farm, given to him by a local earl in exchange for a portion of the farm’s annual proceeds. Now she, her mother, and her two older brothers, Michael and Martin, supplement their meager income by working at the earl’s estate, Blackthorn House. Hard times have again struck Ireland, and the O’Donovan family is barely scraping by, but Martin and Eileen’s mother have found a solution: The teenager must marry the 40-year-old widower John Sullivan, who owns a more prosperous farm. Bookish Eileen, who harbors dreams of romantic true love, is devastated. Despite opposition from Michael and the village priest, the wedding is set, and Eileen accepts her fate. Meanwhile, Michael becomes involved with the secret Irish Republican Brotherhood, known as the Fenians. Eileen’s loveless marriage, the danger brought upon the family by Michael’s revolutionary activities, and more crop failures propel the narrative’s first part and lead first to Michael’s and later to Eileen and John’s immigration to America, where the tale continues. Wernicke’s prose has a charming lilt to it, and her meticulous descriptions of late-19th-century daily life in Bantry Bay capture the physical beauty of the landscape and the feelings of hopelessness in a land roiled by poverty, famine, and political turmoil. As the story moves to America, it includes vivid portraits of crossing the Atlantic in steerage (“It was hot and stuffy with over a thousand people settling into their berths, calling out complaints and jokes about the bloody British”) and details the tragedies, struggles, and fortitude that define immigrant life. Although the novel occasionally skirts the edges of sentimentality, it nicely combines Eileen’s personal drama with historical elements of the time.  

An engaging, poignant, and ultimately uplifting story with a likable protagonist.