Name Upon Name
The story of a young girl caught between the Easter Rising, the outbreak of World War 1 and a divided Ireland

Belfast in 1916. Fourteen-year-old Helen is shaped by her mixed background – rural, Catholic Irish values from mum Kathleen; urban, Protestant Ulster ones from dad James. Her parents are relaxed in their politics but others in the family circle are more extreme – Aunt Violet is a die-hard anti-Home Ruler, more British than the king, while Uncle Sean is staunchly nationalist. These are the parents of Helen’s older cousins: Sandy, who joined the army straight from school and has already seen action in France, and Michael, who runs away from home to enlist. But before he leaves for France, Michael is deployed to Dublin to help quell the Rising, where he’s expected to open fire on his fellow Irishmen. Who and what are they fighting for?

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Name Upon Name
The story of a young girl caught between the Easter Rising, the outbreak of World War 1 and a divided Ireland

Belfast in 1916. Fourteen-year-old Helen is shaped by her mixed background – rural, Catholic Irish values from mum Kathleen; urban, Protestant Ulster ones from dad James. Her parents are relaxed in their politics but others in the family circle are more extreme – Aunt Violet is a die-hard anti-Home Ruler, more British than the king, while Uncle Sean is staunchly nationalist. These are the parents of Helen’s older cousins: Sandy, who joined the army straight from school and has already seen action in France, and Michael, who runs away from home to enlist. But before he leaves for France, Michael is deployed to Dublin to help quell the Rising, where he’s expected to open fire on his fellow Irishmen. Who and what are they fighting for?

10.99 In Stock
Name Upon Name

Name Upon Name

by Sheena Wilkinson
Name Upon Name

Name Upon Name

by Sheena Wilkinson

Paperback

$10.99 
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Overview

The story of a young girl caught between the Easter Rising, the outbreak of World War 1 and a divided Ireland

Belfast in 1916. Fourteen-year-old Helen is shaped by her mixed background – rural, Catholic Irish values from mum Kathleen; urban, Protestant Ulster ones from dad James. Her parents are relaxed in their politics but others in the family circle are more extreme – Aunt Violet is a die-hard anti-Home Ruler, more British than the king, while Uncle Sean is staunchly nationalist. These are the parents of Helen’s older cousins: Sandy, who joined the army straight from school and has already seen action in France, and Michael, who runs away from home to enlist. But before he leaves for France, Michael is deployed to Dublin to help quell the Rising, where he’s expected to open fire on his fellow Irishmen. Who and what are they fighting for?


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781910411360
Publisher: Little Island Books
Publication date: 06/01/2016
Pages: 136
Product dimensions: 5.10(w) x 7.70(h) x 0.60(d)
Age Range: 9 - 12 Years

About the Author

Sheena Wilkinson has been established as one of Ireland’s most acclaimed writers of contemporary realistic fiction for young people. Winner of multiple Children’s Books Ireland awards and recipient of special bursaries from the Arts Council of Northern Ireland for the development of her writing, Sheena is now a full time author and writing teacher.

Read an Excerpt

The carriage was nearly empty. By the time the train was shuddering along the coast towards Cuanbeg, rain lashing the windows, there was only me and the girl in the navy coat left. she looked like a girl in a school story, with her neat brown plait. I'd grown out of school stories but I couldn't help wishing I had one now, instead of only a Belfast Telegraph someone had left behind. The print was so tiny that my eyes and brain hurt. I laid it down with an exaggerated sigh, and, as I'd hoped, she looped up from her own paper.

'War and flu,' I said. 'As usual. Though they say the war's going to end soon.'

She gave me a tight smile and half-turned to look out the window, even though there was nothing to see but streaming rain and a moody pewter sea.

I tried again. 'And a man's died aged 108. If I lived to that age, I'd die in ... um – 2011. Doesn't that sound crazy?' 'Yes.' But she didn't say it in an inviting way and picked up her own paper again. The Irish Citizen.

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