A True Story of Murder and Memory in Northern Ireland
Ratings193
Average rating4.5
This book is excellent. It uses the disappearance of Jean McConville as a thread from which to hang the stories of former IRA members, historical context, and a lot of pain and suffering.
I found the IRA's unwelcome shift of a paramilitary organization fighting an unacknowledged war to a political party maintaining fragile, unsatisfying peace to be particularly interesting.
The bulk of this book is not about Jean McConville's disappearance and probably not a traditional ‘true crime' novel. But her story and the story of her children are often brought back at the perfect moment to frame the historical narrative perfectly.