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Across The Barricades (1973)

Across the Barricades (1973)

Book Info

Author
Genre
Rating
3.59 of 5 Votes: 5
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ISBN
0448056844 (ISBN13: 9780840762801)
Language
English
Publisher
thomas nelson publishers

About book Across The Barricades (1973)

I had to read this book in year 9 in class and again reading in a group (seriously did they not trust us reading by ourselves?) Anyways i just remember being given this book as everyone else was reading Romeo and Juliet but our teacher must have been sick of that so we got given this book. I remember being totally bored to tears with this book and constantly wondering why we were been made to read it, and i thought the pace was slow and nothing really happened and it was mainly sadie and kevin escaping every couple of chapters and so it went on. Once i had finished it though it was a good read i was pleased i read it, it does have some really good moments in the book and i cant remember the name of the woman that worked in the shop but she was funny. Also i think it really got the message across of the problems that were going on in Ireland of the divides they had.

A bit like a modern day Romeo and Juliet, set in Belfast during the 1980’s when violence was prominent, aimed very much towards a teenage audience, with short sentences and no overly difficult language. It has some very twee moments, but also some very sad ones such as the deaths of people who try to ignore the religions and help whoever they felt needed to be helped. It highlighted well the religious and social cultures of different groups (many of which are inherited), as well as the similarities and differences between the different factions of people. A lot was alluded to in the book, but not specifically mentioned and I feel the first book in the series needs to be read in order to understand various situations and comments, along with the subsequent books in the series.

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Across the Barricades was one of my favorite books as a child. Re-reading it as an adult has brought on such a wave of emotions. I know that this book effected me. It helped shape me and my beliefs. It encouraged me to look at the situation here in Northern Ireland from the viewpoint of everyone - to not just blindly follow everyone else on my side of the divide. I know this that it was used a lot as set reading in schools across the country over the years and many people resented being forced to read it, but it just captured my imagination and I loved it. It will always feel special to me.
—Nicola

I read this when I was 11 for English class, and decided to give it another go 19 years later after somebody mentioned it recently. It was quite good, and definitely a better read now than it was at 11. My English teacher, was English, and all my classmates were English so whenever a Northern Irish student started in his class he liked to use this as reading material, I think in the vain hope that we could really related to the characters. I couldn't relate, my area was nice and quite and mixed. Still a good read!
—Deborah

I first read this in school but recently re-read it and thoroughly enjoyed it. The story is based in Belfast during the Troubles and tells the story of two kids who are on different sides of the sectarian divide, whose relationship blossoms when it shouldn't. Very much a modern Northern Irish twist on the traditional Romeo and Juliet story, the book is aimed at young adults but can be enjoyed by readers of any age. The characters are well written and the story manages to focus on the story between Kevin, Sadie and their friends and families rather than getting bogged down with the overall situation of the time.
—Sam

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