The Top 100 Books of the 21st Century: New York Times
Say Nothing:
A True Story of Murder and Memory in Northern Ireland (2018)
by Patrick Radden Keefe
#19
I visited Belfast over the Christmas/New Years Holiday period last year. While I was there, I took a "black cab" tour where a local takes you on a tour of both sides of Belfast- Catholic and Protestant. You see plenty of murals, and it's clear that conflict by proxy continues- the Catholic side is filled with Palestinian flags and the Protestant side with Israeli flags. Keefe's account of the "troubles" which is a period in Northern Ireland history that generally corresponds to the time between the 1960's and the dawn of the Good Friday agreement signed in 1998, has been hailed as a classic, and its inclusion on the Top 100 Books of the 21st Century- I think as the only non-American history book on the list... and the recent Hulu television version.
I listened to the Audio book, and it works well in that format, since much of the writing seems to come from transcribed interviews. The major narrative thrust beyond documenting the historical facts involved (from the perspective of the Catholic side) involves the fate of a handful of "disappeared" including a single mother of seven children- Keefe's desire to "solve" these disappearances is the tension-inducing narrative device that elevates Say Nothing above an ambitious oral history.
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