
FEARLESS!
Vincent Browne's Magill and Ireland in the 1980s
Kevin Rafter(Author)
New Island Books (Publisher)
Will be published approx. on 18. September 2026
Book
Paperback/Softback
376 pages
978-1-83594-043-3 (ISBN)
Description
This book is not just the story of a magazine. It's the history of a crucial and contentious decade in Irish life. The 1980s were years of political turbulence, economic decline and bitter referendums on abortion and divorce. Magill and its founding editor, Vincent Browne, was at the heart of all these stories.
Kevin Rafter uncovers the drama behind Magill from its launch in 1977 to becoming the magazine that the Sunday Times said dragged Irish journalism out of its 'comfortable, questioning dullness'.
Magill was home to great writing and explosive investigations. Many exceptional journalists made an impression on the pages of the magazine including Colm Toibin, Fintan O'Toole, Brian Trench and John Waters, who each filled the editor's seat at different times in these rollercoaster years.
Drawing on extensive interviews and rich archival material, Fearless! reveals a society in upheaval and one magazine's ambition to hold those in power to account for Ireland's future.
'Magill excited, and there was great loyalty. It was never just a job.' - Colm Toibin
'People saw the magazine as having authority.' - Fintan O'Toole
'Magill was fashionable and it had Vincent Browne.' - Eamon Dunphy
'Are there words to describe Vincent Browne?' - Olivia O'Leary
'He was a dictator.' - John Waters
'It was an investigative magazine that held to account people in power, the Church, people in politics, in business and in the media. We tried to do that. Sometimes we did it well.' - Vincent Browne
Kevin Rafter uncovers the drama behind Magill from its launch in 1977 to becoming the magazine that the Sunday Times said dragged Irish journalism out of its 'comfortable, questioning dullness'.
Magill was home to great writing and explosive investigations. Many exceptional journalists made an impression on the pages of the magazine including Colm Toibin, Fintan O'Toole, Brian Trench and John Waters, who each filled the editor's seat at different times in these rollercoaster years.
Drawing on extensive interviews and rich archival material, Fearless! reveals a society in upheaval and one magazine's ambition to hold those in power to account for Ireland's future.
'Magill excited, and there was great loyalty. It was never just a job.' - Colm Toibin
'People saw the magazine as having authority.' - Fintan O'Toole
'Magill was fashionable and it had Vincent Browne.' - Eamon Dunphy
'Are there words to describe Vincent Browne?' - Olivia O'Leary
'He was a dictator.' - John Waters
'It was an investigative magazine that held to account people in power, the Church, people in politics, in business and in the media. We tried to do that. Sometimes we did it well.' - Vincent Browne
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Dublin
Ireland
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Product notice
Paperback (UK-trade)
Illustrations
Plates, black and white
Dimensions
Height: 234 mm
Width: 156 mm
Weight
600 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-83594-043-3 (9781835940433)
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
Person
Kevin Rafter has written best-selling and acclaimed biographies and histories of key political parties, and has co-edited The Irish Presidency. His most recent books Dillon Rediscovered and Taoiseach and the Arts have been described as 'vivid, compelling' (Sunday Times), 'breaking new ground' (Irish Times) and 'gripping history' (Irish Independent). A former leading political journalist, he is Full Professor of Political Communication at Dublin City University, was a Fulbright Scholar at Boston College and has chaired the boards of the main national arts organisations in Ireland.
Content
Introduction
Part 1 Vincent Browne - October 1977 to December 1982
'What about Browne's Periodical?'
'I collected the gun'
'A damn good mag.'
'If the magazine looks a mite disorganised'
'Stepping Back From the Brink'
'Ad hoc distribution arrangements'
'Tip-toeing past Browne's office'
'He is a Fine Gael Provo'
'How Haughey cooked the books'
Part 2 Colm Toibin - January 1983 to March 1985
'The best job in town'
'The occasional Travolta surge'
'She has a heart of gold'
'Somone with a lot of courage
'Sexual shenanigans on a boat off the Isle of Man'
Part 3 Fintan O'Toole - October 1985 to September 1986
'Give a new impetus to the magazine'
'Got two legends into one room'
'The judge got it wrong'
'One wrong move and we will pounce'
'The Ascent into Hell'
Part 4 Brian Trench - January 1987 to January 1988
'Struggling to survive'
'Leave or I'll ring the gardai'
'A platform for your ill-considered views'
'Nothing to do with planting bombs'
'Another hatchet job you want to do on me'
Part 5 John Waters, February 1988 to October 1988
'Down to the last hero'
'Joker in the Pack'
'Deputy Sean Doherty, casually dressed'
'Martin Cahill remains an enigma'
'The offices were a shambles'
Part 6 Vincent Browne - November 1988 to July 1990
'And Now The End Is Near'
'The AIDS Diary'
'He made me a millionaire'
'A million plates spinning at the same time'
Epilogue
Bibliography
Acknowledgements
Index
Part 1 Vincent Browne - October 1977 to December 1982
'What about Browne's Periodical?'
'I collected the gun'
'A damn good mag.'
'If the magazine looks a mite disorganised'
'Stepping Back From the Brink'
'Ad hoc distribution arrangements'
'Tip-toeing past Browne's office'
'He is a Fine Gael Provo'
'How Haughey cooked the books'
Part 2 Colm Toibin - January 1983 to March 1985
'The best job in town'
'The occasional Travolta surge'
'She has a heart of gold'
'Somone with a lot of courage
'Sexual shenanigans on a boat off the Isle of Man'
Part 3 Fintan O'Toole - October 1985 to September 1986
'Give a new impetus to the magazine'
'Got two legends into one room'
'The judge got it wrong'
'One wrong move and we will pounce'
'The Ascent into Hell'
Part 4 Brian Trench - January 1987 to January 1988
'Struggling to survive'
'Leave or I'll ring the gardai'
'A platform for your ill-considered views'
'Nothing to do with planting bombs'
'Another hatchet job you want to do on me'
Part 5 John Waters, February 1988 to October 1988
'Down to the last hero'
'Joker in the Pack'
'Deputy Sean Doherty, casually dressed'
'Martin Cahill remains an enigma'
'The offices were a shambles'
Part 6 Vincent Browne - November 1988 to July 1990
'And Now The End Is Near'
'The AIDS Diary'
'He made me a millionaire'
'A million plates spinning at the same time'
Epilogue
Bibliography
Acknowledgements
Index