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Rita: A Memoir by Rita O’Hare; At the End of The Day by Jimmy Kelly; Until We Fall by Helena Sheehan

Memoirs of three people who committed to their take on a better world, with each subject’s political gravity falling to the left

Martin McGuinness and Rita O’Hare arriving at Dublin Airport in 2005. Photograph: Alan Betson
Martin McGuinness and Rita O’Hare arriving at Dublin Airport in 2005. Photograph: Alan Betson
Rita, A Memoir
Author: Rita O’Hare
ISBN-13: 978-3949573071
Publisher: Greenisland Press
Guideline Price: £18
At The End of The Day, From Gas House Lane to Belfast via London, Cuba, Colombia, Turkey, Washington & Back
Author: Jimmy Kelly
ISBN-13: 978-1- 3999-7940-5
Publisher: Kitty O’Brien Books
Guideline Price: €20
Until We Fall, Long Distance Life on the Left
Author: Helena Sheehan
ISBN-13: 978-1685900274
Publisher: Monthly Review Press
Guideline Price: €20

One day, Helena Sheehan was asked by a group of DCU students recording a vox-pop, “What is the most important lesson you have learned from life?”

“The importance of worldview,” she replied.

This review details the memoirs of three people who committed to their take on a better world. Each subject’s political gravity falls to the left, though they differ in the means and platforms employed to tilt the world towards what they imagined as a better future.

A question to ask of any political memoir is: does it reveal new information or expand our understanding of existing ideas? It is perhaps Gerry Adams who responds most succinctly to this question in an introduction to Rita: “It is an incomplete memoir. There are gaps. It ends too soon.”

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Rita O’Hare was born and grew up in a divided society. She became a significant figure in the Provisional republican movement. She was shot, exiled, imprisoned and an extradition warrant for attempted murder was outstanding until her recent death.

These “gaps” may be explained by O’Hare’s declining health as she composed the memoir (indeed the prose unspools towards the end), but there are areas of interest left unexcavated. While a reader might understand why our subject would adopt a defensive posture, it would have been interesting to meet O’Hare in a more reflective mood.

The confluence of these memoirs is the authors’ commitment to a cause and their tenacity in actioning their worldview

Perhaps more enlightening is Jimmy Kelly’s account of a lifelong commitment to trade unionism, most significantly his involvement with Waterford Crystal and his success in the European Court of Human Rights in securing pension protection legislation. The emphasis is autobiographical more so than historical, but our author makes a convincing case for the power of trade unionism in working towards intersectional social justice.

Helena Sheehan, a Marxist academic philosopher, adopts a seamless narrative in blending memoir, history and academic discourse but I am unconvinced of the merit of this merging of genres. Sheehan’s assertive prose assumes a degree of familiarity. If you don’t already know your glasnost from your perestroika, this is not the book for you.

Stronger by Nicola Hanney: An unputdownable memoir about escaping coercive controlOpens in new window ]

The confluence of these memoirs is the authors’ commitment to a cause and their tenacity in actioning their worldview. In each case, I imagine their readers will be familiar with them, their cause and the characters that occupy these worlds, whether that is through a shared worldview or not. For those who aren’t, the lens may be too narrow.

Bells and whistles might seem a little gauche when it comes to leftist causes, but with each memoir, a tighter edit and investment in graphic design wouldn’t have gone amiss.

Brigid O'Dea

Brigid O'Dea, a contributor to The Irish Times, writes about health