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The Wild Colonial Boy: A Novel
 
 
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The Wild Colonial Boy: A Novel [Hardcover]

James Hynes (Author)
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)


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Book Description

May 1990
After years of violence, a tense calm pervades Northern Ireland, soon to be broken by Jimmy Coogan, an IRA veteran gone renegade. Jimmy has stolen ten pounds of plastic explosive, intending to destroy the parliamentary ambitions of the IRA leadership.

Into Jimmy's turbulent world come two young Americans: Brian, vain, ironic, but well-meaning; and Clare, a beautiful, earnest college student. In Ireland on an errand for his Irish Republican family in Detroit, Brian is recruited to Jimmy's bloody mission by his cousin Maire, Coogan's sharp-tongued wife. Soon they are all drawn into the unforgiving labyrinth of modern terrorism, borne toward a horrific and fatal climax.
--This text refers to the Paperback edition.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Northern Ireland, a place almost synonymous with the brand of terrorism practiced by the Provos, the outlaw branch of the Irish Republican Army, is the setting for this accomplished first novel. Paced like a thriller and conveyed through grittily realistic dialogue and detail, the narrative juxtaposes youth and innocence against an escalating tide of violence. A connection between Detroit-based sympathizers and a violent faction with the IRA is made when Brian Donovan, a feckless young American, becomes a courier, delivering funds to Ireland for the "cause." Once there, he is led to the leader of the faction, Jimmy Coogan, married to his cousin Maire. Without realizing the gravity of his mission, Brian agrees to transfer an immensely more dangerous cargo, plastique explosives, to London, where they will be used with terrible effect. In the course of one shattering week, events lead to the death of Coogan, and to Brian's involvement with Claire Delaney, another fresh-faced American whose Irish heritage has imbued her with values opposite to his. Many threads of the Irish-American linkage are woven into this intelligent, compelling, often eloquent depiction of an enduring conflict.
Copyright 1990 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal

Factional strife within the Irish Republican Army is the subject of this chilling thriller. Brian Donovan, a young American from an IRA-sympathizing family in Detroit, gets caught up in the ruthless internal struggle when he agrees to transport money across the Atlantic to the IRA. Once in Ireland, his terrorist cousins, who are plotting to overthrow the IRA leadership, prevail upon him to undertake a dangerous mission across the Irish border. Brian gets romantically involved with Clare, an American student, but the affair turns tragic when the full horror of what he has been drawn into becomes known. Hynes brings the brutal world of modern terrorism, with its contempt of life and its strange code of honor, vividly to life. The hard realism is frequently terrifying, the plot is believable, and the narrative drive never slackens.
-Bryan Aubrey, Fairfield, Ia.
Copyright 1990 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 356 pages
  • Publisher: Atheneum (May 1990)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0689120893
  • ISBN-13: 978-0689120893
  • Product Dimensions: 9.5 x 6.1 x 1.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #3,501,485 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

5 Reviews
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3 star:
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Average Customer Review
4.4 out of 5 stars (5 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars "Thoughtful thriller" about Northern Ireland's Troubles., April 12, 2001
So timeless is James Hynes's story of IRA terrorism and the people it ensnares that I never suspected the book was originally written ten years ago and just recently reprinted--or that it was a first novel. Beautifully plotted and extremely sensitive to the differing viewpoints of those who seek to reunify the Six Counties with the rest of the Ireland, the novel offers a fresh look at the continued violence, those who plan it, those who support it indirectly through their inaction, those whose financial contributions allow it to affect successive generations, and those who oppose it. Hynes is particularly adept at reducing the complexities of IRA internal politics to manageable levels so that the plot speeds along, sweeping up the reader in the excitement of the moment, just as the main characters are swept up in the emotional rollercoaster of their struggles.

Brian Donovan is a twenty-year-old American delegated by his grandfather, an Irishman who fled the country after he assassinated a British policemen many years ago, to take $10,000 to Irish relatives engaged in IRA activities. A callow young man with no sense of purpose or commitment, he is easy prey for those who would use his ability to cross borders at will to further their own goals. His cousin Maire supports the IRA's new, more moderate position by being elected Sinn Fein city councillor from West Belfast, speaking out and collecting funds, such as those from her relatives in the U.S. Her extremist husband, Jimmy Coogan, however, feels that the moderate position is a sellout. He's stolen 10 pounds of plastique explosives and intends to "make a statement" when the moderate Provos have their national conference. He intends to use Brian to help him.

Hynes's depiction of Brian and Clare, the equally young American girlfriend Brian acquires in his travels, is spot-on. Having never had to deal with the hard truths, Brian and Clare are naïve, looking at the deadly predicament in which they find themselves as if it were part of a virtual reality game. As the conflicts within the IRA become more and more violent, the reader waits for Brian, a Guinness-drinking fun seeker, to grow up and take a stand. A thrilling and exciting can't-put-it-downer, this novel goes beyond the all-or-nothing conflicts we've come to associate with The Troubles in Northern Ireland and IRA violence in England. Here we also come to know some of the real, flawed humans from all sides who've become involved, however unwittingly--often by making emotional, rather than rational, choices about life-and-death issues. As the struggle reaches its violent culmination here, freedom and responsibility take on new meaning. Mary Whipple
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An innocent, a broad...., July 25, 1997
By A Customer
This review is from: Wild Colonial Boy (Paperback)
This is a book I read about ten years ago and re-read periodically with undiminished appreciation. The author lets us see the IRA struggle from the inside and through the lense of a young, not particularly compassionate American. But, caught in a scheme that exploits his unsophisticated self-absorption, he becomes a central character in a deadly plot. This is not a spy thriller, but a thriller that is extraordinarily powerful because it thrusts an ordinary American into circumstances beyond his ability to control and does not devolve into a Tom Clancy fantasy. Suspenseful, funny, and insightful; I've never given the book to a friend who didn't love it. Too many books get rated a "10" in these reviews; this one deserves it
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3.0 out of 5 stars A good, but not great. . ., March 24, 2001
. . .novel about the ongoing violence in Northern Ireland and the United Kingdom, written from the perspective of an accidental, and not particularly sympathetic participant.

I found the plot to be, for the most part, well-written, with 'twists' that made sense; I found the descriptions of Ireland to be beautiful; I found the arguments both for and against violence in the North to be both sad and compelling. Finally, I found the climax to be appropriately dramatic yet believable.

However, the book is not without it's flaws. The finding of Clare by Brian on the ferry seemed to be a forced coincidence to make the story work. I didn't find it to be particularly effective or believable. The depth of the emotions between these two characters I also found to be not quite believable. After all, their relationship was little more than a one-night stand. Finally (and related to the previous objection) I found the conclusion to be extremely unsatisfying and unbelievable.

This book is definitely worth a read. But it's not going to go down in history as a work of genius. I can't imagine re-reading it.

A solid three stars.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
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First Sentence:
Jimmy Coogan kept his eye on the road behind him all the way out of Belfast, watching the blue-black ribbon raveling away in the rearview mirror as he drove up the valley of the River Main. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
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Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Jimmy Coogan, Joe Brody, Sinn Fein, Billy Fogerty, Falls Road, Ard Fheis, Maire Donovan, National Gallery, Special Branch, London Brigade, Uncle Martin, Ann Arbor, Donegal Town, Northern Ireland, Belfast Brigade, Prince Charming, Uncle Matt, West Belfast, Army Council, Brian Donovan, Mary Cathleen Donovan, Big Mac, Bobby Sands, Costa Rica, Desmond Cusack
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