Synopses & Reviews
Few leaders in history have been as mythologized as Michael Collins. Before his death at 31, he had fought in the Easter Rising, organized the IRA and out-spied British intelligence, negotiated the Anglo-Irish Treaty, and run the first independent government in Ireland. Peter Harts groundbreaking biography restores humanity to this mythical figure. Drawing on previously unknown sources, delving into Collinss pre-revolutionary past, and assessing the methodsand the costsof his rise to power,
Mick reveals a man of often ruthless ambition, more politician than soldier, whose friendships went no farther than his interests. A work as thrilling as it is authoritative.
Review
A triumph . . . Insights abound . . . Reads like a le Carré thriller. (The Irish Book Review)
Review
This is the book that will unquestionably be the starting point for all future reflections on Collins. (The New Republic)
Review
A fine biography . . . written with immense verve. (The New York Times Book Review)
Review
A triumph . . . Insights abound . . . Reads like a le Carre thriller. (
The Irish Book Review)
This is the book that will unquestionably be the starting point for all future reflections on Collins. (The New Republic)
[Hart] succeeds in demystifying a legend. (The Boston Sunday Globe)
A fine biography . . . written with immense verve. (The New York Times Book Review)
Review
[Hart] succeeds in demystifying a legend. (The Boston Sunday Globe)
About the Author
Peter Hart is the Canada Research Chair of Irish Studies at Memorial University of Newfoundland and the author of The I.R.A. and Its Enemies (winner of the Christopher Ewart-Biggs Memorial Prize) and two other books on modern Irish history.