Martin McGuinness: From Guns to Government
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Average customer review:Product Description
This work tells the story of Martin McGuinness' personal journey from undistinguished IRA volunteer to the man that "The Cook Report" called "Britain's No 1 Terrorist". By the end of the 1990s, "Esquire" magazine rated him the second most powerful man in the United Kingdom after Rupert Murdoch. And, although he denies ever having been IRA Chief of Staff, he says that he regards the charge as a compliment. McGuinness, first Minister for Education in the Northern Ireland Assembly, is the lynchpin of the current ceasefire. He has been described as "excellent officer material", "the personification of the armed struggle", and "IRA godfather of godfathers". Yet he is also a devout Catholic, a husband and father of four and a keen poet and fisherman. In his native Derry, he is equally revered and reviled. This book uncovers the truth behind the enigmatic and intensely private individual who holds the peace process in the palm of his hand. Following interviews with friends and family, IRA volunteers, police officers, IRA victims, civil servants and politicians, the book tells the remarkable story of how McGuinness steered the IRA through war to peace.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #276245 in Books
- Published on: 2003-04-24
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 288 pages
Editorial Reviews
Review
'Fascinating...the McGuinness story is truly amazing: read this biography and blanch' Sunday Independent 'A useful new insight into the man' Irish News 'An impressive study of the most controversial republican member of Northern Ireland's current power-sharing government' Daily Telegraph
About the Author
Liam Clarke has worked for The Sunday Times since 1984 and is currently Northern Ireland Editor. He is also the author of Broadening the Battlefield: H-Blocks and the Rise of Sinn Fein Kathryn Johnston has researched and written about Northern Ireland paramilitary organisations for a wide variety of British and Irish television companies and newspapers.
Customer Reviews
A frustrating read
I purchased this book on the basis of the above synopsis, and interests in accounts of The Troubles and political biographies. Unfortunately, the synopsis does not accurately represent the book, and readers are unlikely to learn anything new about The Troubles or about Martin McGuinness. The authors' credentials, as presented to the reader on the cover, are of a prominent journalist (Clarke) and established researcher (Johnston). This suggests to the reader a degree of detachment from the subject matter that is belied by every page; it soon becomes apparent that Clarke and Johnston personally revile McGuinness. They may have good grounds for doing so, but in this case, their grounds for feeling this way should be openly declared; their book may have been strengthened, and in any event, would have been more honest. Adulation of a subject and revulsion both undermine biography. A key source for this book was Paddy Ward, who was shown at the Bloody Sunday Inquiry to have contradicted himself in the various accounts he has given of his actions on Bloody Sunday. Clarke and Johnston have him as a key player and close associate of McGuinness on the day, whereas Ward was 16 years old, and no other witness to the Inquiry supports his testimony.
It isn't necessary to speculate about the authors' motives in writing this book, to argue that if those elements in the British government who would like to pass the responsibility for the death and injury of unarmed people on Bloody Sunday by British soldiers from the British State to the IRA, then this book would make an excellent commission.
For an honest account of why someone might have been drawn into the IRA in the 1960s and the events surrounding Bloody Sunday, the classic account remains that of Eamonn McCann, War and an Irish Town (Pluto Classic - Oct 1993). McCann was a member of the Official IRA and closely involved in the Civil Rights movement from its earliest days; he remains a committed socialist and peace activist in Derry, and writes with wit, passion, and a sceptical eye. For readers looking for a more detached - and well sourced - account of events that precipitated the most recent Troubles in Northern Ireland, The Sunday Times Insight Team: Ulster (Paperback - Feb 1972), which was read into the US Congressional Record, is also highly recommended; (it was Clarke's connection with the Sunday Times, as well as the synopsis above, that lead me to buy From Guns to Government.) A more recent work, Those Are Real Bullets, Aren't They?: Bloody Sunday, Derry, 30 January 1972 by Peter Pringle [Sunday Times & Observer] and Philip Jacobson [The Times] (Paperback - 27 April 2000) also provides a balanced and gripping account of Bloody Sunday.
A clear eyed biography of an Irish politician who first came to prominence through the politics of violence needs to be written - Martin McGuinness: From Guns to Government is not it. [G.K., Cambridge, UK]
Can we judge?
This book gives a fabulous insite into a man who chosen to follow a path towards uniting the six counties of Northern Ireland with the Republic of Ireland.
Living in England, it is hard to find a person who respects this man for his beliefs. This is because upon reading tabloid newspapers you are immediately brainwashed with the view of the writer. Before you can make a valid opinion on Martin and Republicanism, i think it is important to understand why there is such people. You need to be educated of the problems young Catholic Republican people faced during the 1970's and 1980's. A young Loyalist (mainly Protestant's who wish to remain British) couple could aquire a council house in as little as 3 weeks, when at the same time it would take a similar Republican couple 2 years to be housed.
When you understand the extent of racism in Ulster, perhaps you can understand why a man would chose to live a life like Martin's.
Nelson Mandela was labeled a terrorist when he was sent to jail, now he is seen as a hero. In my eyes, Martin seeks a similar freedom which is sought by Mandela, but unless people escape the propaganda which they are fed by British newspapers and educate themselves on the 'Struggle', Martin will always be labeled a terrorist by people who are too ignorant to see both sides of the argument. After all, one man's terrorist is another man's freedom fighter.



