Land of the Ever Young ~ Culture Matters!
On 22nd November a new children’s book will be published, the final book in a set of three volumes of working people’s writing from contemporary Ireland. It follows on from a poetry anthology, Children of the Nation, and a prose anthology, From the Plough to the Stars, all edited by Jenny Farrell and published by Culture Matters.
The project is a
pioneering venture that has been fully supported by the Irish trade union
movement in recognition of the importance of creativity and the right of the
working class to express their culture and their experience of life.
All the children’s
stories in the book are packed with humanity, tenderness, and wisdom. The
authors present children and adults who confront wrongs, challenge superstition
and injustice, and who often see further than others around them. The heroines
and heroes in these stories are always filled with a sense of the common good,
highlighting the qualities necessary to make society a fairer, better place, a
home for a happy future, a Tír na nÓg, the Land of the Ever Young. Such a place
can only materialise in the absence of wars, of profit-driven greed with its
contempt for equality, humanity and the environment— a place where instead the
common good is the measure of society.
Children read and
re-read stories many times, and they often stay with them for a lifetime,
acting as a moral compass. This is what makes literature for children so very
important. The images that accompany children’s stories are also remembered for
a long time, and Land of the Ever Young has been beautifully illustrated
by the artist Karen Dietrich. Her images comment on and expand the humanist
themes contained in the texts and help make them truly memorable for all
readers, children and adults alike.
Land of the Ever Young: An Anthology
of Working People’s Writing for Children from Contemporary Ireland, edited by
Jenny Farrell with illustrations by Karen Dietrich, ISBN 978-1-912710-43-0, 12 Euros plus p. and p. All three books are available at www.culturematters.org.uk
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