Book description
Trinity College Dublin of the 1960s was an unusual, even unique
institution, where students from Ireland, England and farther afield
came together at a fascinating time in post-war Europe. TCD then was a
small, mainly Protestant university, founded in 1592 curiously cut off
from but also a part of an old Catholic city with her  seedy
elegance' and  gentle veils of rain'. It remains an eccentric,
self-contained world, richly textured and defining for those who
embraced it. Trinity Tales explores this milieu as it is refracted
through the lenses of its thirty-six distinguished contributors, from
Roy Foster, Jeremy Lewis and Derek Mahon, to Donnell Deeny, Heather
Lukes and John Stephenson Â- alumni who overlapped and acted their
part in rehearsal for a life beyond the walls. This book, with its
period iconography, is an invaluable evocation of that culture and
those players. Contributors: Bernard Adams, Sebastian Balfour, Ian
Blake, Terence Brady, Edna Broderick, Rock Brynner, Mary Carr, Jacques
Chuto, Christopher Jane Corkery, Michael de Larrabeiti, Deborah de
Vere White, Donnell Deeny, Mike Dibb, Damian Duggan-Ryan, Roy Foster,
Andy Gibb, Rosemary Gibson (a tribute), Nicholas Grene, Gill Hanna,
Tom Haran, Douglas Henderson, Ann Heyno, Peter Hinchcliffe, Laurie
Howes, Turlough Johnston, Jeremy Lewis, Michael Longley, Heather
Lukes, Ray Lynott, Derek Mahon, Fawzia Salama, John Stephenson,
Harriet Turton, Mirabel Walker, Anthony Weale and John Wilkinson.
Sebastian Balfour is an English historian and Professor Emeritus of
Contemporary Spanish Studies at the London School of Economics.