Never Call It Loving: A Biographical Novel of Katherine O'Shea and Charles Stewart Parnell

by Dorothy Eden

Paperback, 1966

Status

Available

Call number

823.914

Publication

Greenwich, CT: Fawcett, c1966

Description

Based on a true story: A novel of an illicit love affair in nineteeth-century Ireland by the New York Times-bestselling author of The American Heiress. Katharine O'Shea is an unhappily married young mother of three when she meets Charles Stewart Parnell, "the uncrowned king of Ireland." They couldn't be more different. Kitty is from an aristocratic English family. Born in County Wicklow to Protestant gentry, Parnell is a passionate crusader for Ireland's oppressed poor. But their first encounter leaves them both with the certainty that something momentous has occurred. Before long, they're engaged in a forbidden liaison--one that will have profound ramifications for Kitty's personal life and Charles's brilliant political career. As their love affair plays out on the world stage, scandal and a scorned husband's revenge conspire to destroy everything Charles has worked to achieve for the Irish. Set against the tumultuous backdrop of late-nineteenth-century England and Ireland, Dorothy Eden's most ambitious novel weaves a passionate, heartbreaking story of a larger-than-life man and woman whose only crime is falling in love.      … (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member mumoftheanimals
This is the story of Kitty O'Shea, married woman whose love affair with Charles Stewart Parnell in the late nineteenth century led to the famous Irish patriot's downfall.

My rating, done long after reading, was two to three stars. However, when I looked at my notes and highlights I found that some
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of the descriptive prose was much better than I normally find in low star books so I upgraded it.
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Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

1967

Physical description

287 p.; 18 cm
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