Book description
J U S T OVER a month after the 1921 truce that ended Ireland's
fight with England, Ernie O'Malley longed for a return to war. Ten
months later he was waging civil war against many of the men he had
once fought with, against those who accepted the new Irish Free State.
No Surrender Here!' The Civil War Papers of Ernie O'Malley 1922-1924
is the first comprehensive collection of letters, memoranda and orders
detailing this period of chaos and confusion, intransigence and
idealism, which gripped the country from June 1922 to May 1923. These
documents detail the war as it was fought with none of the benefit of
hindsight and occasional artistry that marks the memoirs of many of
the men involved, not least O'Malley's own carefully crafted
narratives, On Another Man's Wound and The Singing Flame, published
decades later. This collection documents one man's attitude to war and
his difficult acceptance of peace, his experience of capture,
imprisonment, hunger strike and finally release. In these letters,
however, 'No Surrender Here!' also captures the voices of both the
leadership and the rank and file: the detached and often inappropriate
orders from above, and the confusion of men who, in some cases without
boots on their feet, know that theirs is a hopeless cause. Letters to
friends and family also reveal the more personal costs of war. These
fully annotated documents, given historical perspective with a general
introduction by Professor Joe Lee, provide extraordinary insights into
the republican mentality during the Irish Civil War, into what remains
a contested and controversial period of modern Irish history.
Cormac K. H. O'Malley co-edited with Richard English Prisoners: The
Civil War Letters of Ernie O'Malley (Poolbeg, 1991) and edited Rising
Out: Sean Connolly of Longford (1890-1921) by Ernie O'Malley (UCD Press,
2007). Cormac is an international legal consultant based in New York
City and is the son of Ernie O'Malley.