HomePublished BooksBealach na Spáinneach

Bealach na Spáinneach

By: Liam Mac Cóil
Publisher: Leabhar Breac
Published: January 2020
Pages: 604
Categories: Fiction, Literature
Language: Irish
Available as: Paperback
On sale at:
ISBN-13: 9781909907713

Bealach na Spáinneach is the third and final part of Liam Mac Cóil’s trilogy of historical novels set in 1612 when there remained a possibility that departed Gaelic leader Hugh O’Neill, Earl of Tyrone, might return to Ireland with an army to expel the English. In the first book, An Litir (2011), a young Galway student, Lúcás Ó Briain, is entrusted to deliver a letter into the hands of the Great O’Neill in Rome. From the outset the messenger is being followed and desperate efforts are made to take the letter from him. Thanks to his skill as a swordsman and some good fortune, he manages a dramatic escape from Galway. In the follow up, I dTír Strainséartha (2014), the close pursuit continues across England and, having narrowly escaped capture and death, the young hero again manages to keep the letter safe and make his way to the English Channel and safety, if he can survive a winter storm and shipwreck. Both books of swashbuckling derring-do were highly praised by critics and readers alike and garnered a number of literary prizes for Mac Cóil and Leabhar Breac. Fans of the series, like myself, had been waiting impatiently for the final part of the trilogy. Given that the first part took almost 300 pages to get Lúcás out of Galway and the second nearly 400 pages to get him across England, many of us wondered if his perilous journey to Rome might need a fourth or fifth volume, but this third volume has completed the trilogy. Bealach na Spáinneach stretches to just over 600 pages, bringing the whole saga to almost 1,300 pages, an exceptional achievement in contemporary Irish-language fiction. The author and publisher are to be congratulated for the sustained effort and dedication to their task. The final stages of his journey take Lúcas from the French coast to Rome, largely following the route taken by the leaders of Gaelic Ulster. Mac Cóil gives us excellent and credible pen-pictures of the countryside and cities as Ó Briain’s odyssey takes him through Ostend, Bruges, Brussels, Basel, Lucerne, Milan and Rome. There is loads of wonderful, descriptive and atmospheric writing here, and I often felt as if I were being transported through the genre paintings and landscapes of seventeenth-century Europe as the chase wound its way through narrow streets, into tempting inns and over mountain passes. There is betrayal and bloodshed, intrigue and distrust, physical and moral challenge as the young student encounters a series of friends and foes.

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