Border Crossings
-
- $2.99
-
- $2.99
Publisher Description
Kathy O'Faolain is an American woman who seems to have it all—a loving husband, a satisfying job helping troubled teens, and an adorable young son. She lives happily with her Irish husband, Pearse, in Dublin—but her life is forever changed when Pearse's brother is murdered by Protestant terrorists in Northern Ireland. When Pearse feels obligated to return home to the north and take over his brother's role as a Republica activist, Kathy's life is turned upside down. Struggling to understand the hate that plagues this troubled land, she watches the violence creep closer and closer to the people she loves—and soon she must make a heartbreaking choice between her husband and her son's future.
Border Crossings is the story of an American woman, Kathy O'Faolain, happily married to Pearse, an Irish professor at Trinity College. Life in Dublin is good for the O'Faolain family until Pearse receives word that Protestant extremists have murdered his brother, a Sinn Fein councilor in Enniskillen, Northern Ireland. Kathy's ordered life falls apart when relatives convince Pearse to return to his family home in Enniskillen and take over his brother's work in the Republican cause. Kathy, with her young son, Sean, must adapt to life in a violent society, and by doing so, finds her personality changing in ways that are both positive and negative.
"A stirring first novel of terror, death, love, and hope, told with power and conviction and set in the troubled part of Northern Ireland where peace at long last seems almost possible." -- Andrew M. Greeley, bestselling author of IRISH GOLD, SUMMER AT THE LAKE, CONTRACT WITH AN ANGEL, etc...
"BORDER CROSSINGS is a searing look at a family caught in the maelstrom of a tragic political conflict. Carole Bellacera has captured, with amazing believability, the passions and the hatreds that fuel the Irish Troubles." -- Tess Gerritsen, New York Times Best-Selling Author of HARVEST, BLOODSTREAM, LIFE SUPPORT.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
"The Troubles" in Northern Ireland are viewed through a misty, romantic lens in Bellacera's emotional first novel. The saga of the O'Faolain family--whose female members all seem to have "riots" of auburn curls or near-black "clouds" of hair--begins with a tragedy. Two Protestant terrorists gun down Peg and Kennet one June evening at their house in Enniskillen before the eyes of their teenage daughter, two young sons and infant. Kennet's brother Pearse, a professor of Irish history, and his American wife, Kathy (the novel's central character), feel compelled to leave their comfortable life in Dublin with their baby, Sean, to head north, over the border, to the town of Pearse's birth. Under pressure from his militant, prison-hardened sister, Erin, Pearse decides it's both his patriotic and familial duty to stay in the North and fight for "the Cause" in his dead brother's place. Kathy, however, takes a very dim view of County Fermanagh. When she realizes she's pregnant, she struggles to balance her protectiveness of Sean and her unborn child with her desire to support her husband, unrecognizable as he is in his new political skin. The dismal situation in the North, as well as her changing relationship with Pearse and the sadness of a new loss, are brightened by an emerging relationship with her niece Aisling. The revelation of one gunman's secret relation to the O'Faolains personalizes the complex religious and political patterning that Bellacera tries to examine. She is more successful when describing the domestic, sexual and parental relationships to which her homey prose is better suited.