From a Clear Blue Sky : Surviving the Mountbatten Bomb
From a Clear Blue Sky : Surviving the Mountbatten Bomb
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Author(s): Knatchbull, Timothy
ISBN No.: 9781504089333
Pages: 330
Year: 202312
Format: Trade Paper
Price: $ 35.87
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

The prize-winning, "exceptionally moving" memoir of a family boat trip, an IRA bombing, and a teenager's loss of his twin brother ( The Telegraph ). Christopher Ewart-Biggs Literary Award Winner and PEN/JR Ackerley Prize Nominee On an August weekend in 1979, fourteen-year-old Timothy Knatchbull joined his family on a boat trip off the shore of Mullaghmore in County Sligo, Ireland. By noon, an Irish Republican Army bomb had destroyed the boat, leaving four dead. The author survived, but his grandparents, family friend, and twin brother did not. Lord Mountbatten, his grandfather, was the target, and became one of the IRA's most high-profile assassinations. Knatchbull and his parents were too badly injured to attend the funerals of those killed, which only intensified their profound sense of loss. Telling this story decades later, Knatchbull not only revisits these terrible events but also writes an intensely personal account of human triumph over tragedy--a story of recovery not just from physical wounds but deep emotional trauma. From a Clear Blue Sky takes place in Ireland at the height of the Troubles and gives compelling insight into that period of Irish history.


But more importantly, it brings home that while calamity can strike at any moment, the human spirit is able to forgive, to heal, and to move on. "A minute by minute story of what happened that day, and what happened afterwards." -- Daily Mail "This is an extremely moving book. Beyond providing a phenomenally detailed evocation of his own family's trauma, Knatchbull has lots of wise things to say about how we survive horrors--of all kinds--in our lives." -- Zoƫ Heller, author of the Booker Prize finalist Notes on a Scandal "A very poignant, clearsighted, heartbreaking but ultimately positive account." --Hugh Bonneville, The New York Times.


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