
Liberty Hall
Michael O'Loughlin(Author)
New Island Books (Publisher)
Published on 30. April 2021
Book
Paperback/Softback
128 pages
978-1-84840-797-8 (ISBN)
Description
Michael O'Loughlin was seven years old when the Irish trade union movement replaced its headquarters, Liberty Hall - the starting point of the 1916 Rising - with Ireland's first skyscraper. This bold, seventeen-storey Liberty Hall expressed an aspiration towards the modernity which its builders envisaged as the birthright of future generations. Since then, as one of Dublin's most iconic buildings, Liberty Hall has cast a personal and political light on the lives of citizens passing below, and formed the backdrop to O'Loughlin's earliest childhood memories.
In this remarkable new book - a highly original fusion of poetry, visual images and prose memoirs - Liberty Hall becomes both a real and imaginary space, a physical building and a state of mind in which to be free; a place where the boundaries between verbal and visual, poetry and prose, past and present, city and suburb, local and global, all become fluid. It is a book of numerous journeys: the ritualised crossing of the Liffey from North to South and back again; travels around European cities; and into O'Loughlin's own family history in the first difficult century of the Irish state. He explores the emotional weather through memory, cinema and architecture, arriving in the end at Liberty Hall.
In this remarkable new book - a highly original fusion of poetry, visual images and prose memoirs - Liberty Hall becomes both a real and imaginary space, a physical building and a state of mind in which to be free; a place where the boundaries between verbal and visual, poetry and prose, past and present, city and suburb, local and global, all become fluid. It is a book of numerous journeys: the ritualised crossing of the Liffey from North to South and back again; travels around European cities; and into O'Loughlin's own family history in the first difficult century of the Irish state. He explores the emotional weather through memory, cinema and architecture, arriving in the end at Liberty Hall.
Reviews / Votes
O'Loughlin remains refreshingly counter-lyrical to the dominant chord of pathos in much contemporary poetry. The engines of his poems are often fuelled by anger. He is a poet not just of language, but of strong opinion and ideas, and one with an international and political dimension. Liberty Hall is a welcome and brilliant addition to his work. -- Paul Perry * Irish Independent * Liberty Hall shows that O'Loughlin remains a disruptive thinker, disinterring platitudes, labels and nationalities. He is a quizzical intellectual, equally at home and displaced in all cultures. This allows him to write intimately about Dublin, while retaining an outsider's perspective when scrutinising fault lines in his family's and his country's history. -- Dermot Bolger * Sunday Business Post * "Liberty Hall, however, is no travel guide. It finds O'Loughlin circling his own life and that of his family; the cities and countries he has called home; Europe as geographical and political construct and the expression of what a poetry collection can be." -- Keith Payne * Dublin Review of Books *More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Dublin
Ireland
Illustrations
11 Plates, black and white
Dimensions
Height: 135 mm
Width: 216 mm
Thickness: 12 mm
Weight
122 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-84840-797-8 (9781848407978)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Person
MICHAEL O'LOUGHLIN was born in Dublin in 1958 and studied at Trinity College Dublin. He has published six collections of poetry, including Another Nation: New and Selected Poems (1996), In This Life (2011) and Poems: 1980-2015, published by New Island Books (2017). He has published numerous translations, critical essays and reviews, as well as writing screenplays and journalism. He has been Writer in Residence in Galway City and County, Writer Fellow at Trinity College Dublin, and is a member of Aosdana.