
The Irish Times ePaper
News
App
Experience The Irish Times in its original format with the ePaper, a digital replica of the printed...

Just Another Kid
Book
No other teacher had been able to handle these six emotionally damaged children. Three were recent...

The Virtues - Season 1
TV Season
`The Virtues' is an emotionally charged drama that teeters on the edge of total self-destruction....
It starts a bit rough in the beginning as the change in perspective takes some getting used to, once I did it was a great read. The characters and thier issues were so immersive that you started to hope that they'd figure things out. I loved getting to know the family.
It is an emotional rollercoaster I did cry (it wasn't a bad one) and there are triggers for ppl who have eating disorders and depression.
The descriptions are amazing in felt like I was in Ireland and Italy. A great read and worth it.

David McK (3587 KP) rated Dungeons and Dragons: Honour Among Thieves (2023) in Movies
Apr 10, 2023 (Updated Sep 10, 2023)
(I must admit that, as large parts of it were filmed in my home of Northern Ireland, I did spend quite a bit of time playing 'spot the location').
It also has a refreshing low-stakes feel about it (there's no real 'end of the world' disaster to be averted), and I did also feel that it had elements of Monty Python around it (particularly in the talking to the dead graveyard bit)

David McK (3587 KP) rated Lift (2024) in Movies
Mar 21, 2024
I watched this mainly so I could play spot-the-location (some of it being filmed in my home country of Northern Ireland), but have to say it was also better than I was expecting!

Tim McGuire (301 KP) rated Grabbers (2012) in Movies
Mar 3, 2020

The Audacious Crimes of Colonel Blood: The Spy Who Stole the Crown Jewels and Became the King's Secret Agent
Book
One morning in May 1671, Colonel Thomas Blood daringly attempted to seize the Crown Jewels from the...

Otherworlds: Fantasy and History in Medieval Literature
Book
This book offers a new perspective on the otherworlds of medieval literature. These fantastical...

ClareR (5933 KP) rated The Pull of the Stars in Books
Nov 8, 2020
Nurse Julia Power is unmarried at 30 and seems to be happy with that, as she sees women whose bodies are worn out from giving birth so many times and so closely together, women who have been abused by their fathers and forced to bear their children, women who have conceived their babies outside of marriage and will be forced to give them up - as well as young women who have been institutionalised from birth and forced to give up their lives to repay the nuns who raised them through free labour (Magdalene laundries). Like I said, this was no time to be a woman. The abuse and poor treatment of the women on the ward is alluded to, but never explicit.
Whilst most of the story takes place on the quarantined labour ward, we do get a glimpse in to the home life of Nurse Power, and it was interesting to see how the war had impacted on and affected her brother.
This is a beautifully told story packed full of heart. It may not have been my best move to read it during a pandemic, but nevertheless, I absolutely loved it.