Whom God Loves
by
Book Details
About the Book
As a member of the Kimmage Garrison (comprised of exiles from England) WILLE MacNAMEE fought in the General Post Office in the 1916 EASTER RISING. Through a strange quirk of fate he was one of the very few volunteers from that garrison to survive.
Meanwhile, in Parnell Street (around the corner from the G.P.O.) while the City of Dublin burned, the widow MARY O'DWYER, grappled with hoards of stockpiling customers in her FAMILY DAIRY. Until shortages and the threatening flames forced its closure. Thankfully the dairy escaped unharmed. And Mary thanked the Good Lord for his blessings which included the non involverment of any of her seven offsprings in the Rising. However, on the day of the surrender two incidents associated with the RISING brought immeasurable sorrow to Mary and her family.
Later as a P.O.W. in the Frongoch Camp in Wales, Wille became friendly with Mary's son, Peter. As members of the IRB (The Irish Replican Brotherhood) both men joined Collins' secret 'net work.' Shortly afterwards Peter introduced Willie to his two younger sisters, NANCY and JANE, when they came to visit from Dublin. For Willie and Jane it was love at first sight.
During the rest of their stay in Frongoch, Willie and Peter, together with many other nationalists, became immersed in Collins' secret plans to wage guerilla warfare in Ireland after their release, which occurred on the 22nd December. However, Willie's clandestine association with Collins afterwards caused great unhappiness in his romance with Jane. Foremost was the mother's intolerance and prejudice against the renegade republican, Willie, keeping company with her daughter. Eventually Willie had to make a choice.
About the Author
Vivian Hollis Mayne was born, married and lived in Dublin, Ireland, until she was in her fifties. She has two daughters. In December 1982 she immigrated to Canada. Her first job was baby-sitting her first grand child. After which she worked as SECRETARY to a Musical Festival. However, throughout this time she yearned to fulfill a lifetime’s ambition to write. On retirement she began writing screenplays, her first winning The Banff Screenwriters’ Workshop Award. This was enough encouragement to continue. Short stories published in Irish magazines followed. But this was not satisfying enough. Over the years when she was growing up in Ireland, true stories told by her parents to the family (of which there were six) about ‘the troubles’ in Ireland, kept going around in her mind and she began to work on the novel “Whom God loves” (he persecutes) – an expression used regularly by her mother. Her other interest is music. Interspersed with her writing she plays the piano with Senior Bands providing entertainment for Seniors in Retirement Homes, Nursing Homes, Hospitals and Seniors in Care.