Read Jaywalking with the Irish Online
Authors: Lonely Planet
The encounter with Ireland that this book describes was made possible by many beneficent spirits. First of all, our families, whose astounding selflessness blessed our passage; Mick and Hylda Buckley, who opened some of the first gates to Cork; the hearty souls of Bellevue Park, who accepted us with every Irish blessing; and Paddy and Anne Wilkson, who kept the link alive for decades. Gratitude is in fact owed to more Corkonians than can be mentioned here – to people like Peter Murray and John McMonigle, who nearly lifted the Cork magazine idea into being; to Gerry Barnes and the damsels at the Opera House.
Special thanks are in order for those who helped refine the book through its growth pains: Jonathan Williams, Owen McIntyre, and the gentleman and poet Tom McCarthy in the earlier going; and the gifted Lonely Planet editors Janet Austin and Meaghan Amor through the many stops and starts to the home stretch. But Jamie – here was the muse, the partner in jaywalking who turned dream to reality.
A number of texts were also helpful in writing of this book, particularly
The Cork Anthology
(Cork University Press, 1993), edited by Sean Dunne;
Discovering Cork
(Brandon Book Publishers Ltd., 1991) by Daphne D. C. Pochin Mould; and
The Lie of the Land: Journeys through Literary Cork
(Cork University Press, 1999) by Mary Leland. Other historical background came from
The Coast of West
Cork
(Appletree Press Ltd., 1972) by Peter Sommerville-Large;
Sneem, The Knot in the Ring
(Sneem Tourist Association, 1986) by T. E. Stoakley;
The Secret Places of West Cork
(Royal Carbery Books, 1990) by John M. Feehan;
Irish Country Towns
(Mercier Press, Cork, 1994), edited by Anngret Sims and J. H. Andrews;
Narrative of a Journey from Oxford to Skibbereen During the Year of the Famine
(Oxford, 1847, reprinted by Cork Corporation 1996) by Lord Duferin and the Hon. G. F. Boyle; and
Clonakility, a History
(Litho Press, Midleton, Cork, 1999) by Michael J. Collins.