Inspired by his extensive reading, he had by now turned to prose and when, the following year, he produced his first novel, Children of the Dead End, which caused a literary sensation. The subtitle of the work was The Autobiography of a Navvy and into it the young author, at the age of just twenty-three, poured vivid and colorful descriptions of the life he had led until then, his family's struggle for existence, his days as a hired boy in Tyrone, the hard conditions he had endured in the fields of Scotland and the characters he had met in the navvies huts in Scotland. More controversially, he attacked the system, not only in Britain but also in Ireland, for the human misery in which he and so many of his countrymen lived and worked at the time. He would not be forgiven in many quarters in Ireland for his quite vicious and relentless criticism, not particularly of the landlord class in Ireland, but of the local parish priest and his friend, the local merchant, the gombeen man, both of whom he accused of exploiting the people and both of whom were clearly identifiable. As organized labor was becoming a power in the land, here was a new and formidable voice on behalf of the working class who was of that class and who had shared, however briefly, the hardships and isolation to which they were subjected.
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Patrick MacGill was born in Glenties, Co. Donegal and was a prolific journalist, poet and novelist. During World War I he fought with the London Irish Rifles and was later recruited by MI7. MacGill died in 1963. An annual literary MacGill Summer School is held in Glenties in mid July each year in his honour.
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BLANDA. Condition: Bueno. Dust Jacket Condition: Bueno. Libro de segunda mano en buen estado.\nLIBRO EN INGLES. Based on personal memories of his life in ireland and Scotland during the early 1900s, Children of the Dead End is Patrick MacGill's first novel. It tells the storyof Dermod Flynn, an independiient and feisty youth, who earns a meagre living as an itinerant farm handin Donegal and County Tyrone, before moving to Scotland with a potato-picking squad. Alternately living on the road, labouring and navying, Dermod reads voraciously, begins to discover his talent as a writer and is eventually lured to Fleet Street, where he briefly follows a career in journalism. Libros. Seller Inventory # 154002
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