Back to Main Page Bernard MacLaverty: CAL

Additional Literature: Joan Lingard


If you want to read more about the conflict in Northern Ireland you should take a look at a triology by Joan Lingard that is consisting of the titles: "The twelfth day of July", "Across the Barricades" and "Into Exile".

Hypertext-Projekt "The Twelfth Day of July" - 10. Klasse

In The twelfth of July the Irish author describes the living conditions of two young teenagers in Belfast, who are almost neighbours but couldn't live further apart. Sadie Jackson and her brother Tommy live in the Protestant part of the town, while Kevin McCoy and his younger sister Brede live just a few blocks away in the Catholic neighbourhood. Shortly before the Twelfth of July, a very important day for the Protestants since William of Orange had beaten the Catholic army on this day in 1690, Kevin and his friend Brian plan to vandalize the picture of William on a protestant wall.

Foto: July 12th parade of Orangemen

Sadie and her friends are outraged and take revenge by changing the Republican inscription "God Bless the Pope" into "God Bless King Billy". Sadie gets caught and Kevin takes her home to frighten her. Days later the Jackson's house burns down and they suspect an attack by the Catholics. Now hell breaks out. But the fights between the two cliques end abruptly when Brede gets seriously hurt. Tommy, Sadie and Kevin accompany her to the hospital and spend the next day at the sea. The book ends with the start of an unusual friendship.

Three years went by during which Sadie and Kevin didn't see each other. One day, they accidently bump into each other and quickly become friends again. Against all odds they fall in love with each other but because of their backgrounds run into a lot of trouble with their families and friends. Kevin decides to go to England, he can't stand the everyday life conflicts in Belfast anymore. Against all values Sadie has been raised on she decides to go with Kevin to lead a peaceful life "Across the Barricades".

Sadie and Kevin fled "Into Exile" and are now married. But their problems catch up with them and numerous little arguments make their life in London miserable. When Kevin's dad dies he has to go back to Belfast to take care of his sick mother. Sadie stays in London and the misunderstandings that she can't talk out with her husband make her feel insecure. When Kevin writes to her that he wants her to live with him, Brede and their mother in the house of Breede's fiance in the Irish countryside to nurse the old woman, she loses faith in her marriage. But Kevin understands that Sadie can't live with a woman that sees a bloody Prod when she looks at her daughter-in-law and they leave again to find a peaceful place.

 
Joan Lingard

Joan Lingard was born in Edinburgh but grew up in Belfast where she lived until she was eighteen. She is the internationally renowned author of several novels. Joan Lingard has three grown up daughters and now lives permanently in Edinburgh with her Canadian husband.

Joan Lingard received the prestigious West German award the Buxthuderbulle in 1986 for Across The Barricades. Tug Of War has also received great success: shortlisted for the Carnegie Medal 1989, The Federation of Children's Book Group Award 1989, runner up in the Lancashire Children's Book Club of the Year 1990 and shortlisted for the Sheffield Book Award.

"...Joan Lingard's novels for young people deal with familiar conflicts and tensions associated with adolescence, and her characters have life and credibility. She has a shrewd eye for portraying teenage preoccupations." -
(The Scotsman)
 
from: http://www.penguin.co.uk/
(with links to her other books on the same website)

JOAN LINGARD

"Background and inheritance are very important to me in my writing. My characters are shaped by the environment they have been born into or are growing up in, and also by the genes they inherit. The children of Northern Ireland are different from other children in the British Isles because of their religious and political inheritance, yet in many ways they are similar to young people everywhere. It is the universality of much of human experience which enables the reader to identify with the characters in a novel and find echoes of recognition, regardless of where the book is set.

"I was born in Edinburgh, where I now live, but spent the formative years of my life, from the age of two to eighteen, in Belfast. From those years have come the KEVIN AND SADIE QUINTET and THE FILE ON FRÄULEIN BERG. Scotland, too, has provided the background for several of my books, such as RAGS AND RICHES, GLAD RAGS and STRANGERS IN THE HOUSE, while my husband's backgrounds of Latvia and Canada have inspired me to write TUG OF WAR, BETWEEN TWO WORLDS and NIGHT FIRES.

"Many of my characters do not remain in their particular backgrounds; they are uprooted displaced for one reason or another, and have to resettle. When people are displaced from their pattern of living, they have to readjust, to take stock of old values and assess new ones. Their lives are suddenly wide open, many new things become possible. What will they do, which way will they go? The crossroads of change interest me very much as a writer. Adolescence itself is a major crossroad in life, a time of upheaval, which can be both exciting and stressful. I think that is why I have written so much about the teenage years.

"I began to write when I was eleven years old. I was an avid reader and could never find enough to read. One day when I was complaining to my mother about having nothing to read she said, Why don't you write a book of your own? I thought, Why not? So I acquired some lined, foolscap paper, filled my fountain pen with green ink and began. From then on I wanted to be a writer, a novelist, and create stories of my own. It has always seemed to me that life is limited we inhabit one body and see the world through our own eyes but by writing and reading we can live in different worlds, get inside the skins and minds of other people, and, in this way, push out the boundaries of our lives."

Joan Lingard received the prestigious West German award, the Buxtehuder Bulle, in 1986 for ACROSS THE BARRICADES. TUG OF WAR has also enjoyed great success and was shortlisted for the 1989 Carnegie Medal, the 1989 Federation of Children's Book Group Award, runner-up in the 1990 Lancashire Children's Book Club of the Year and shortlisted for the 1989 Sheffield Book Award.

Joan Lingard has three grown-up daughters and one grandson and lives in Edinburgh with her Canadian husband

from: http://www.puffin.co.uk/

 

by Silke Christiane

© EN21L Gymnasium Ulricianum Aurich - 21-07-98 (links checked and improved: 25-06-2000)

back to top of page