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Reviewed by Jamie Michele for Readers' Favorite
Set in 1867 in Bantry Bay, Ireland, Out of Ireland by Marian O'Shea Wernicke follows sixteen-year-old Eileen O'Donovan, who, due to her family's financial hardships after her father's passing, is reluctantly married to a 40-year-old widower named John Sullivan. The prospect of an arranged marriage shatters her dreams of romantic love. Meanwhile, her brother Michael becomes involved with the secret Irish Republican Brotherhood with consequences that impact their already troubled lives. Amidst crop failures and a storm of trouble, Michael and, later, Eileen and John, decide to immigrate to America in search of a better life. Their journey to a new land presents its own fresh set of challenges, leaving lasting impacts on their identities and experiences.
Out of Ireland by Marian O'Shea Wernicke is a gorgeously written historical saga that does more than tell a great story; it immerses readers in the life and times of a family and the tumult of their era in a tale that depicts the realities of 19th-century Ireland and the exodus journey. Religion and culture are integral parts of what it means to be Irish and these are richly depicted in scenes when a loved one is dying and Eileen sets up a small table with candles and a crucifix as a priest arrives to perform the Extreme Unction. It's somber, emotional, and visually beautiful. The evolution of characters is the most important part and the author delivers this as they all transition from one life to the next. My favorite part is when Eileen is in a position where she wishes to help someone who is, by nature of her skin color, in more dire circumstances than even she is. Eileen decides to teach Bess to read and chooses Little Women, which is so appropriate. I have no doubt that readers will reach for Out of Ireland with the same earnest feelings, and be heartened to have done so. Very highly recommended.