When:
December 17, 2024 @ 7:30 pm – 8:30 pm America/Chicago Timezone
2024-12-17T19:30:00-06:00
2024-12-17T20:30:00-06:00
Where:
Online Via Zoom
Cost:
Free
Contact:
Anne Melia

For our December 17th Book Club we will be reading Thin Places by Kerri ni Dochartaigh. I (Anne) read this book earlier this year. As a person who has not read very extensively about the conflict in Northern Ireland, I found myself profoundly affected by Kerri’s book. I’ve definitely become a fan of her writing.

To register, click here to email Anne Melia, JEDI book club organizer.

Here is the Goodreads summary:

A breathtaking mix of memoir, nature writing and social history: this is Kerri ní Dochartaigh’s story of a wild Ireland, an invisible border, an old conflict and the healing power of the natural world

Kerri ní Dochartaigh was born in Derry, Northern Ireland, at the very height of the Troubles. She was brought up on a grey and impoverished council estate on the wrong side of town. But for her family, and many others, there was no right side. One parent was Catholic, the other was Protestant. In the space of one year they were forced out of two homes and when she was eleven a homemade petrol bomb was thrown through her bedroom window. Terror was in the very fabric of the city, and for families like Kerri’s, the ones who fell between the cracks of identity, it seemed there was no escape.

In Thin Places, a mixture of memoir, history and nature writing, Kerri explores how nature kept her sane and helped her heal, how violence and poverty are never more than a stone’s throw from beauty and hope, and how we are, once again, allowing our borders to become hard, and terror to creep back in. Kerri asks us to reclaim our landscape through language and study, and remember that the land we fight over is much more than lines on a map, more than housing estates and parliament buildings – it will always be ours but, at the same time, it never really was.

To register, click here to email Anne Melia, JEDI book club organizer.