Reviews for There will be fire : Margaret Thatcher, the IRA, and two minutes that changed history

Publishers Weekly
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Carroll (Comandante: Hugo Chavez’s Venezuela), the Guardian’s Ireland correspondent, recreates a real-life Day of the Jackal in this sterling account of a 1984 plot to assassinate British prime minister Margaret Thatcher. Drawing on more than 100 interviews with “former IRA members, police detectives, bomb disposal experts, politicians, officials, and friends and relatives of key players,” as well as other sources, Carroll vividly describes the attack, which involved an Irish Republican Army operative placing a bomb at the Brighton, England, hotel where Thatcher was staying during a Conservative Party conference. The explosive was smuggled into the hotel and detonated by Patrick Magee, who, despite being on the radar of numerous security agencies for more than a decade, was able to check into the hotel and plant the bomb that came disturbingly close to killing Thatcher; five others died and more than 30 were wounded in the explosion. Carroll gives the definitive account of this terror attack, delving into the security lapses and placing the events in a larger geopolitical context: “For want of two minutes, or a few feet, history could have turned, and with it the fate of Northern Ireland, Thatcherism, and the Cold War.” This is must reading for anyone interested in the history of the Troubles. Agent: Will Lippincott, Aevitas Creative Management. (Apr.)
Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
A revealing story of an Irish Republican Army bombing against the vast backdrop of Irish history. “In the tangled, tortuous history of Britain and Ireland, the past is not a settled matter,” writes Guardian journalist Carroll. “There is no grand, shared narrative. Atroc-ities and justified actions are in the eye of the beholder.” Certainly, terrorism is how Margaret Thatcher’s government characterized IRA attacks on British troops and civilians in the 1980s. At the center of the narrative is the 1984 bombing of a Brighton hotel where Thatcher addressed a Conservative Party conference. “Thatcher lived,” writes Carroll. “Well, she and her government now knew that the Troubles could not be contained. The Provos had brought the war not just to England but to her inner sanctum.” The bomber returned to Ireland and then traveled back to England to launch a planned campaign of bombings of British resorts to ruin the tourist economy and frighten the British populace. Although Sinn Fein leader Gerry Adams—who, notes Carroll, refused to talk with him for this book—claimed to have no knowledge of the IRA’s military campaign against Thatcher’s government, the bombers had a role in Adams’ “grand strategy.” They met with less favor on the part of former backer Moammar Gadhafi, who dropped his support for the IRA and “sought other, bloodier ways to punish his enemies.” Carroll closes his tense, riveting text by considering the what-ifs and long-term effects of the attack on Brighton—for which, he notes, the bomber later repented, sort of, after a lengthy prison sentence. One of those effects was Thatcher’s increasing hatred of the European Union, of which Ireland was part, which led to Brexit, which in turn is leading to a growing call to integrate Northern Ireland into the Republic. “In the end,” Carroll concludes, “it may be Margaret Thatcher’s legacy, not IRA bombs, that delivers a united Ireland.” A lucid history of the Troubles in all its manifold complexities. Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.