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Reporting the Troubles 2: More Journalists Tell Their Stories of the Northern Ireland Conflict [Pehme köide]

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  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 272 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm
  • Sari: Reporting the Troubles
  • Ilmumisaeg: 09-Mar-2022
  • Kirjastus: Blackstaff Press Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 1780733259
  • ISBN-13: 9781780733258
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 272 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm
  • Sari: Reporting the Troubles
  • Ilmumisaeg: 09-Mar-2022
  • Kirjastus: Blackstaff Press Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 1780733259
  • ISBN-13: 9781780733258
In this follow-up to their landmark first book, Deric Henderson and Ivan Little have gathered new stories from seventy journalists who have worked in Northern Ireland during the Troubles. These contributors write powerfully about the victims they have never forgotten, the events that have never left them, and the lasting impact of working through those terrible years.





Reporting the Troubles 2, which includes contributions from a new generation of journalists, who came up in the years leading to the Good Friday Agreement, provides a compelling narrative of the last fifty years, and covers many of the key events in Northern Irelands troubled history, from Bloody Sunday in 1972 to the inquest into the Ballymurphy Massacre in 2021.





Grounded in the passionate belief that good journalism and good journalists make a difference, Reporting the Troubles 2 is a profoundly moving act of remembrance and testimony.





'I am sometimes asked to identify the most important story that I dealt with while I was editor of the Irish Times I answer that the most important story was not published in a single day but over years. And it was not put together by any one journalist but by a whole cohort of reporters, photographers, feature writers and editors For the most part they just got by-lines and the satisfaction of knowing that what they were doing was important, that the story had to be told, day by day, hour by hour. And that telling it could make a difference. It is difficult to imagine that there could ever have been a peace process without that.





CONOR BRADY, former editor, Irish Times





Contributions from - 





Gordon Adair, Don Anderson, Ciaran Barnes, Colin Bateman, Jilly Beattie, Charlie Bird, David Blevins, Declan Bogue, Conor Brady, Stephen Breen, Eugene Campbell, Peter Cardwell, Mark Carruthers, Niall Carson, Paddy Clancy, Simon Cole, Liam Collins, Mark Davey, Donna Deeney, Michael Denieffe, Patricia Devlin, Michael Donnelly, Roisín Duffy, Gavin Esler, Michael Fisher, Jim Flanagan, Mike Gaston, Gareth Gordon, Jim Gracey, Paul Harris, Deric Henderson, Mark Hennessy, Gary Honeyford, Paul Johnson, Fergal Keane, Vincent Kearney, Gerry Kelly, Will Leitch, Ivan Little, Robin Livingstone, David Lynas, Darragh MacIntyre, Michael Macmillan, Kevin Magee, Stanley Matchett, Don McAleer, Roisin McAuley, Barry McCaffrey, Jonny McCambridge, Freya McClements, Sir Trevor McDonald, Lindy McDowell, Mark McFadden, Hugh McGrattan, Seamus McKee, Fearghal McKinney, Allison Morris, Rod Nawn, Malachi ODoherty, Maggie OKane, Mike Parry, Lance Price, Colin Randall, Paul Reynolds, Maggie Taggart, Eric Villiers, John Ware, Nicholas Watt, Johnny Watterson, David Young.
Foreword xi
Bertie Ahem
Sir Tony Blair
Introduction xiii
Deric Henderson
Ivan Little
The town we didn't know so well
1(4)
Belfast, 1970
Conor Brady
How bombs stopped play during rooftop cricket matches
5(3)
Belfast, 1970s
Sir Trevor McDonald
Fighting the print industry's sectarian saboteurs
8(4)
Lurgan, 1970s
Eric Villiers
The Bloody Sunday line I wish I had not filed
12(4)
Derry, 1972
Paddy Clancy
How my picture became Bloody Sunday's iconic image
16(3)
Derry, 1972
Stanley Matchett
The black-and-white print from 1972 that caught up with me
19(4)
Belfast, 1972
Michael Denieffe
The day I asked the IRA, `What the fuck was that all about?'
23(3)
Belfast, 1972
Malachi O'Doherty
Deadly secrets stashed in a wardrobe
26(4)
Belfast, 1972
Johnny Watterson
How the Troubles shattered the `quiet' of the North Coast
30(4)
Coleraine, 1973
Hugh McGrattan
The strike that set Northern Ireland apart
34(4)
Northern Ireland, 1974
Don Anderson
The phenomenon that was the Peace People
38(4)
Belfast, 1975
Maggie Taggart
The priceless Penny Marvel
42(3)
Belfast, 1976
Don McAleer
Nairac -- a collision of myths in a dark field
45(3)
Dromintee, County Armagh, 1977
Roisin McAuley
Remembering Lesley Gordon
48(4)
South Derry, 1978 and 2021
Deric Henderson
My breakneck journey to report Mountbatten's murder
52(4)
Mullaghmore, County Sligo, 1979
Mike Parry
Football's night of shame
56(5)
Dundalk, 1979
Jim Gracey
The gangster and the peacemaker who lived streets apart
61(3)
Belfast, 1979
Gary Honeyford
Jumping on the bonnets of upturned cars
64(4)
Dublin, 1981
Liam Collins
The one thing we learn from history is that we don't learn from history
68(2)
Derry, 1984
Eugene Campbell
The killing of Sean Downes
70(4)
Belfast, 1984
Paul Johnson
Covering paramilitary funerals
74(4)
Belfast, 1984
Michael Fisher
The Mafia, the IRA, Johnny Depp and me
78(4)
Cork and beyond, 1984
Ivan Little
Jimmy Graham: a man I never met but cannot forget
82(3)
Derrylin, County Fermanagh, 1985
Gareth Gordon
An Englishman in New Lodge
85(3)
Belfast, 1986
Simon Cole
All around was chaos
88(4)
Killeen, County Armagh, 1987
Rod Nawn
Seared into my mind forever
92(3)
Enniskillen, 1987
Jim Flanagan
How Gordon Wilson moved me, and the country, to tears
95(4)
Enniskillen, 1987
Mike Gaston
The army killing of GAA player Aidan McAnespie
99(4)
Aughnacloy, County Tyrone, 1988
Declan Bogue
Twists and turns, patterns and connections
103(4)
Belfast, 1988
Gavin Esler
For me, the story of the Troubles is told in silence
107(3)
County Fermanagh, 1988
Fergal Keane
The inquest on the Rock
110(4)
Gibraltar, 1988
Paul Harris
Too close for comfort -- standing by a 10001b bomb
114(3)
Derry, late 1980s
Vincent Kearney
Kelly: the talk show that defied the Troubles
117(4)
Belfast, 1989
Gerry Kelly
The tiny white coffin that made me ashamed of my homeland
121(3)
RAF Wildenrath, West Germany, 1989
Michael Macmillan
We didn't emote because that would get in the way of the work
124(4)
Belfast, 1992
Darragh MacIntyre
How a bomb ended my journalism career
128(3)
Bangor, 1992
Colin Bateman
A war hero murdered by loyalist cowards
131(4)
Belfast, 1992
Ciaran Barnes
A chilling car journey with `Mad Dog' Adair
135(4)
Belfast, 1993
Maggie O'Kane
`We need help to speak again'
139(3)
Belfast, 1993
Seamus McKee
Early signs of the pillars that underpinned the peace process
142(4)
Belfast, 1993
Nicholas Watt
My neighbour John Hume
146(3)
Greysteel, 1993
Roisin Duffy
Rule 5: tell your story
149(4)
Canary Wharf, London, 1996
Jilly Beattie
`All their songs are sad'
153(3)
Donegal, 1996
Colin Randall
Persistence mixed with luck
156(3)
London, 1996
Fearghal McKinney
`I love you ...' `Love you right back'
159(3)
Aghagallon, Lurgan, 1996
David Blevins
Lives left in despair by political failure
162(4)
Drumcree, 1998
Mark Hennessy
Silence like no other
166(2)
Omagh, 1998
Mark McFadden
The impact of GCHQ's chokehold on the investigation into the Omagh bombing
168(5)
Omagh, 1998
John Ware
Familiar faces in Downing Street
173(3)
London, 1998
Lance Price
How the Troubles caught up with me in the Florida sunshine
176(4)
Fort Lauderdale, USA, 1999
Lindy McDowell
Court reporting and the murder that made me question everything
180(3)
Belfast, 2000
Michael Donnelly
A father's quest to find out the truth about his son's murder
183(3)
Tandragee, County Armagh, 2000
Gordon Adair
Crossing paths with Michael Stone, Northern Ireland's most notorious loyalist gunman
186(5)
Belfast, 2000
Kevin Magee
Clandestine meetings with the `park walker'
191(4)
Belfast, 2001
Barry McCaffrey
Holy Cross - why was it allowed to happen?
195(4)
Belfast, 2001
Allison Morris
Still agonising about a front-page story
199(4)
Rathcoole, County Antrim, 2002
Jonny McCambridge
Face to face with Freddie Scappaticci
203(4)
Belfast, 2003
Robin Livingstone
Thomas Devlin: his family's fight for justice and the trust that keeps his memory alive
207(4)
North Belfast, 2005
Stephen Breen
`We don't want to go back to this'
211(3)
Massereene Barracks, Antrim, 2009
David Young
I'll never forget the Queen's visit to the Garden of Remembrance
214(3)
Dublin, 2011
Charlie Bird
The night my luck ran out
217(4)
Belfast, 2011, and Derry, 2019
Niall Carson
Continuing violence, north and south of the border
221(4)
Dublin, 2013
Paul Reynolds
Ready to tell their story: survivors revisit the horror of the Ballygawley bus bombing
225(4)
Ballygawley, 2013
Peter Cardwell
Lyra
229(3)
Derry, 2019
Donna Deeney
`I want the world to know my Philip's name': remembering the children who were killed in the Troubles
232(4)
Northern Ireland, 2019
Freya McClements
Terrorist threats
236(4)
Belfast, November 2020
Patricia Devlin
How the storming of the Capitol reminded me of Drumcree
240(4)
Washington DC, 2021
Mark Davey
Too close
244(4)
Belfast, 2021
David Lynas
Keeping the peace in the TV studio
248(4)
Belfast, 2021
Mark Carruthers
The Ballymurphy Inquest -- and the meaning of legacy
252(3)
Belfast, 2021
Will Leitch
Acknowledgements 255(2)
Index 257