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Showing posts sorted by date for query Spirit of '58. Sort by relevance Show all posts

Wednesday, 31 August 2016

I REVIEW BOOKS - HERE'S A DOZEN!

In recent times, I have devoted much of this blog to book and music reviews.  Here is a selection of the books.

UNFINISHED PEACE by BRIAN ROWAN


TRACING YOUR NORTHERN IRISH ANCESTORS by IAN MAXWELL

BEHIND THE HEADLINES by ALF McCREARY


CONSUMER KIDS by ED MAYO & AGNES NAIRN

TEENAGE KICKS: MY LIFE AS AN UNDERTONE by MICHAEL BRADLEY

eYE MARTY by MARTY FELDMAN

THEY KILLED THE ICE CREAM MAN by GEORGE LARMOUR

THE SEVEN by RUTH DUDLEY EDWARDS

SPIRIT OF ’58 by EVAN MARSHALL

UP THE MICKS: AN ILLUSTRATED HISTORY OF THE IRISH GUARDS

FULL THROTTLE: ROBERT DUNLOP, ROAD RACING AND ME by LIAM BECKETT

THE GOOD SON by PAUL McVEIGH
http://droppedthemoon.blogspot.co.uk/2015/05/book-review-good-son-by-paul-mcveigh.html

If any editor would like me to review books or write features, please get in touch via joecushnan@aol.com


JOE CUSHNAN'S PUBLISHED FEATURES, REVIEWS & POETRY, AND OTHER SCRIBBLINGS:

Books: Shops, Shoppers, Shopping & Shafted; Before Amnesia: Seeds Of A Memoir; Shaking Hands; Retail Confidential; Much Calamity & The Redundance Kid; Stephen Boyd: From Belfast To Hollywood; Hamish Sheaney: The Nearly-Man Of Irish Literature; Juggling Jelly; Geek!; A Belfast Kid; Jack Elam, I Gave You The Best Years Of My Life; The Chuckle Files; The Poems Of Hamish Sheaney: Remastered & Expanded; Only Yules & Verses; Only Drools & Corsets; Fun With Words, Fun With Rhyme; Fun With Words, Fun With Noise


Creative portfolio includes The Galway Review, Scarlet Leaf Review, Derwent Poetry Festival 2015, 2015 Templar Poetry Anthology “Mill”, Octavius Magazine, Ireland’s Big Issue, Ink, Sweat & Tears, Belfast Telegraph, 2013 Belfast Book Festival, Irish News, BBC TV NI “Stephen Boyd: The Man Who Never Was”, BBC Radio Sheffield “Rony Robinson”, BBC Radio Ulster “Saturday Magazine”, BBC Radio 4 “You & Yours”, The Guardian, Tribune, NZ Management, The Grocer, Retail Week, Edge, Open Eye, Yorkshire Post, The Catholic Herald, Cambridge Evening News, The London Paper, Southern Cross, NZ Freelance, Writer’s News, Belfast News Letter, Irelands Own, Fortnight, The Dalhousie Review; Blithe Spirit; The Cannon’s Mouth, Poetry Monthly, Poetic Comment, Bard, Current Accounts, Candelabrum, Decanto, Inclement, Haiku Scotland, Time Haiku, etc. 




Friday, 22 July 2016

HAPPY 5TH BIRTHDAY TO MY BLOG




Today is the 5th birthday of this blog. It started out as a workshop for my own poetry and then developed into all sorts of meanderings. We are heading towards 105,000 views. Amazing.

I am particularly proud in recent times to have championed quite a number of creative Northern Irish writers and musicians and the all-time most viewed posts appear below.

Thank you to everyone who took an interest. I hope to continue to keep things interesting in the future.

MOST VIEWED:

The Good Son by Paul McVeigh
Full Throttle by Liam Beckett
The Beginning of the End by Ian Parkinson
Down to Earth Cookbook by Paula McIntyre
Feeling' Good by Kaz Hawkins Band
They Killed The Ice Cream Man by George Larmour
Spirit of '58 by Evan Marshall

MOST VIEWED LINKS:







Thursday, 26 May 2016

BELFAST MEANS A LOT TO ME, SO IT DOES

I'm off to Belfast tomorrow evening, my home town, the place that shaped me for better or worse. I was born there, I grew up there and I had my first employment there. I have family there. I have memories of there. It's a city with a troubled history, rumblings ever present but it is also a city of positive vibrancy when it comes to the creative arts. There is energy here and not just the dubious energy of politics and continuing extremism, which after all this time is both dangerous and tedious. There is a wondrous environment of music, writing in all its forms, theatre and everything else you could mention. Just listen to The Arts Show on BBC Radio Ulster on weeknights, presented by Marie-Louise Muir and Michael Bradley and watch The Arts Show on BBC Northern Ireland TV every month, presented by Marie-Louise Muir.  Listen to Ralph McLean's Local Voices Show (also BBC Radio Ulster) on Wednesday nights. How can your jaw not drop at the talent?

I have had the pleasure on this blog in recent times to read/listen and review books/music and I am blown away by the quality of the brilliant output of writers and performers. I have loved The Good Son by Paul McVeigh, Full Throttle by Liam Beckett, Unfinished Peace by Brian Rowan, Spirit of '58 by Evan Marshall, The Dangerous Harpist by Ursula Burns, Don't Make Me Go To Town by Brigid O'Neill, They Killed The Ice Cream Man by George Larmour and so much more.

I will be on The John Toal Show on Radio Ulster on Saturday morning talking about my father's missing 22 years. He left his Belfast home, his wife and seven children and vanished. Next we heard of him was in 1982 when we were told he had died in Clapham, London. The Da that never was........

Belfast means a lot to me.

So it does!

Much more to say but I'll leave it there for now. Must sort my socks and undies.........

Tuesday, 17 May 2016

BOOK REVIEW - SPIRIT OF '58 BY EVAN MARSHALL





















Spirit of ‘58
The Incredible Untold Story of Northern Ireland’s Greatest Football Team
By Evan Marshall
Blackstaff Press 2016


In the summer of 1958 tiny Northern Ireland stood just one game away from a semi-final appearance in the World Cup against mighty Brazil. Led by their brilliant manager, Peter Doherty, and captained by the inspirational Danny Blanchflower, the team had triumphed against all odds, blazing a trail through the qualifying rounds and battling through their opening matches to claim their place on the world stage.

I have never been a football fan but I have always been fascinated by heroic stories, especially where apparent no-hopers find the guts, determination and luck to win against all the odds. Growing up in Belfast in the late 1950s and 1960s, it was impossible not to be fascinated by famous people from my city - actors, singers, poets et al, and, of course, footballers. The earliest source of fascination with football was Danny Blanchflower and whilst I never saw him play, he was often on television talking about his sport. I detected from the comments of admirers and experts that very clearly he was someone special. In later years, I more than appreciated George Best too. But it was Blanchflower’s name, unusual and distinctive, that helped me to file him in my head forever as a great Northern Irishman. He is one of the main stars of Spirit of ’58 by Evan Marshall, a superb book, expanding on his documentary film on the same subject, a minor team’s amazing World Cup journey.

Peter Doherty (“Peter the Great”), as manager, was given the task of building a competitive Northern Ireland team for international tournaments. He was a well-respected man. He played the game and he knew the game. He was mindful of skills and tactics and more than aware that it was the players, well-chosen for a mix of abilities, the coaching and the team spirit that would take them on a sometimes bumpy road to a delicious taste of glory. He was appointed in 1951 and what happened between then and the 1958 World Cup is stirring stuff.

Northern Ireland had become known for some spectacular score line defeats but Doherty, with seemingly endless supplies of patience, planned and analysed each game, win, lose or draw, to pick out tactical and player strengths and identify areas for improvement. Guts and grit did not always result in glory but over time the team ingredients came together slowly but surely. A relatively benign but honest Northern Irish press gave moral support in the main, with the Belfast Telegraph’s Malcolm Brodie especially critical when necessary but also praiseworthy when deserved. Danny Blanchflower’s intelligent reading of the game added much to Doherty’s campaign to succeed. Individual players including Harry Gregg and Billy Bingham were enjoying varying degrees of success at club level across the water and they all had considerable contributions to make to the national team’s efforts.

“By the summer of 1957, the Northern Ireland team had matured into a cohesive unit, boasting players of talent and skill. The football cards swapped in playgrounds featured the faces of many Northern Ireland players. They weren’t makeweights any more, they were genuine stars supported by a second rank of solid performers.”

It was a tough journey indeed and a brilliant chapter on a Northern Ireland v Italy game – The Battle of Windsor (Park) – illustrates how brutal, uncompromising and ugly football could become as a referee problem, a demotion of the match’s status, an angry crowd and violent tension on the field combined to produce the unfriendliest friendly imaginable. Fortunately, such cauldron-like atmospheres were rare. It’s a great piece of writing. There were different but nonetheless other disruptive shenanigans surrounding a ban on Northern Ireland playing games on Sundays. Staggering as this sounds today, church organisations wielded great powers about what could and couldn’t happen on the Sabbath. There was even a danger that Sunday restrictions on playing football would have meant that the national team might have been forced to withdraw from the World Cup. Fortunately, some sense prevailed and the journey continued.

The awful tragedy of the Munich air disaster in February 1958 claimed twenty-three lives. Twenty-one people survived including two Manchester United and Northern Ireland players, Harry Gregg and Jackie Blanchflower. Sadly, Blanchflower’s injuries were career-ending but Gregg somehow found the resolve to carry on. Through injuries, hurdles, Irish Football Association organisational ineptitude and tragedy, Peter Doherty and the entire squad stayed focused, continuing to develop a happy-go-lucky, hard-working team that was still regarded by some as jokers in the pack. The 1958 World Cup games saw Northern Ireland beat Italy, draw with Wales, beat Czechoslovakia twice, lose to Argentina, draw with West Germany and finally lose four nil to France in a quarter-final match.

The match against France was one step away from Northern Ireland playing Brazil in the World Cup semi-final. The brilliant Peter Doherty selected his team from a comparatively small squad (my quotes from across the book): Harry Gregg (“superbly talented and athletic”); Dick Keith (“a key figure”) ; Alf McMichael (“veteran of the pre-Doherty side”); Danny Blanchflower (“quick wit and intelligence, a manager on the pitch”); Willie Cunningham (“naturally a right back”); Wilbur Cush (“dominant in the air”); Billy Bingham (“speedy legs and gifted feet”); Tommy Casey (“toughness on the field”); Jimmy McIlroy (“a thinking man’s footballer”); Peter McParland (“everything that a manager wanted”); and Jackie Scott drafted in from Grimsby Town. Danny Blanchflower reflected that travel tiredness and injuries played a huge part in the loss “not the sour grapes of a bad loser. We had practically no chance even before the teams kicked off.” Nevertheless, it was an outstanding run.


As I said earlier, I have never been a football fan but Evan Marshall has written an excellent book with universal appeal that is well-researched, detailed, thrilling, emotional and a fine tribute to everyone involved in the 1958 campaign. The descriptions of matches are written beautifully, capturing the excitement, the highs and lows, the frustrations and emotions and the sheer gruelling toughness required to compete in such a tournament. It is a human story, a heroic story and a historically significant episode in Northern Irish sport. Rather like Northern Ireland’s 1958 World Cup record, this book is a magnificent achievement.

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