Description The Phelan and the Conway farms stand in hostile confrontatiion across the river. The long dispute between the two families simmers, then explodes.
Meanwhile, Martha Phelan is locked in stubborn conflict with her son Peter. He wants to make changes in the way the farm is run, but she secretly plans quite different changes; the tension between them builds but is suddenly overtaken by the force of a greater problem.
In her second novel Alice Taylor continues the story begun in The Woman of the House, capturing the pulse and sinews of Irish rural life as no other author has done.
Alice Taylor's second bestselling novel, a story of land, love and family; a sequel to The Woman of the House.
"Alice Taylor is an outstanding storyteller. Like a true seanchaí, she uses detail to signal twists in the plot or trouble ahead. It is tightly plotted fiction, an old-fashioned page-turner." The Irish Times
Author Alice Taylor is the biggest-selling author ever published in Ireland. Her first memoir of country life, To School Through the Fields, was published in 1988 and has become acknowledged internationally as a classic account of childhood; its sequels, Quench the Lamp, The Village, Country Days and The Night Before Christmas have also been bestsellers.
In 1997 her first novel, The Woman of the House, also established her as a bestselling novelist, and was followed in 1999 by a sequel, Across the River.
The biggest-bestseller ever published in Ireland, a universal classic of recollective writing which has been published in translation in many countries from Japan to Poland.
Irish cottages, the pleasures of walking in autumnal woods, a hens' hatching house and a country garden, these are just some of the elements in this varied patchwork quilt of views of rural life.
"Beautifully written; she gently and accurately writes about old age, death, the countryside and animals. Poetry that will bring a smile to the face of a reader, or leave them thinking about their own mortality..." Examiner
"Infused with wit and lyricism . . . Taylor describes the past vividly and without complaint as years of hard labor for herself, parents and siblings, making clear that the days also were full of fun shared with neighbours in the close-knit community." Publisher's Weekly
"A delightful story about Fairyland . . .suitable both for adults to read to young children and for beginning readers to tackle themselves." Cork Examiner
Once-vibrant villages and towns are empty, their former inhabitants now in housing estates built in the surrounding countryside, from which they emerge to drive their children to school and crawl on traffic-choked roads to go to work. No one walks to the school or shops, and most of the village shops have been put out of business by hypermarkets and shopping centres that stand surrounded by massive car parks beside main roads. Village post offices, once vital social gathering places, have been closed.
In a series of vignettes of life in her own village, Alice Taylor reasserts the priorities of public space and social community. The Parish evokes and explores the positive values of community, values that could be renewed and reinvigorated in a present and future that achieves harmony between relative affluence and the pressing need to respect the environment.