Evelyn Conlons voice is instantly recognisable:
wise, funny, insightful (inciteful, if thats a word) and irrepressible.
Lia Mills
In Reading Rites, Evelyn Conlon brings her characteristic wit and keen intelligence to the task of exploring her writing life, drawing out the events, people, books and concerns that have helped to make her the writer she is.
Using the lens of her own life as a starting point, she considers a vast array of subjects, including education; the effects of the Catholic Church, particularly on the lives of women; the legacy of historical moments such as 1916; and, through it all, the power of books to free us, to offer understanding, and to help us to see outside and beyond ourselves.
Part memoir, part manifesto, Reading Rites is full of the sharp observation, restless questioning and hard-won wisdom that make Conlon one of Irelands finest and most compelling writers.
These essays amount to an alternative history of social change in Ireland
each one manages to keep faith with the truth of public speech.
Sean OReilly
Praise for this book
"An invigorating and absorbing account of the one of our great writers, thinkers and activists. Colon's wry prose infused with politics, candour and humour." - Sinéad Gleeson
Used availability for Evelyn Conlon's Reading Rites