“Her narrative is extraordinarily vivid, with a style and a vocabulary surprisingly modern S a document of historical importance.” —Richard Roche, The Irish Times Among the most pungent of first-hand accounts of the Famine S this welcome reissue, meticulously edited by Maureen Murphy, includes abundant and illuminating annotations.” —Patricia Craig, Times Literary Supplement ‘I’ve read a great deal about the Famine but I haven’t read anything that captures the horrors in so vivid a style, and with such understanding and sympathy. She also writes eloquently about the landscape and the people… I could go on. It is so evocative, so moving.” —Margaret Ward, historian and biographer “Asenath Nicholson’s account of the Irish Famine is a document of historical importance and contemporary relevance… an American Protestant widow travelling alone through the starved and staunchly Catholic countryside of Ireland, Mrs Nicholson is so unique and original that she seems to have stepped out of a novel. Hers is a true witness and real voice that penetrates the bloodless statistics of Ireland’s Famine agony and renders the immense human tragedy at its heart. She can be read with equal reward by anyone interested in feminist studies, Irish history, philanthropy, the Victorian age, cultural anthropology or the history of religion. It is remarkable that so striking and unusual a narrator has been neglected for so long. Mrs Nicholson’s time has come. Attention must be paid.” —Peter Quinn, author of Banished Children of Eve “Her narrative is extraordinarily vivid, with a style and a vocabulary surprisingly modern S a document of historical importance.” —Richard Roche, The Irish Times Among the most pungent of first-hand accounts of the Famine S this welcome reissue, meticulously edited by Maureen Murphy, includes abundant and illuminating annotations.” —Patricia Craig, Times Literary Supplement ‘I’ve read a great deal about the Famine but I haven’t read anything that captures the horrors in so vivid a style, and with such understanding and sympathy. She also writes eloquently about the landscape and the people… I could go on. It is so evocative, so moving.” —Margaret Ward, historian and biographer “Asenath Nicholson’s account of the Irish Famine is a document of historical importance and contemporary relevance… an American Protestant widow travelling alone through the starved and staunchly Catholic countryside of Ireland, Mrs Nicholson is so unique and original that she seems to have stepped out of a novel. Hers is a true witness and real voice that penetrates the bloodless statistics of Ireland’s Famine agony and renders the immense human tragedy at its heart. She can be read with equal reward by anyone interested in feminist studies, Irish history, philanthropy, the Victorian age, cultural anthropology or the history of religion. It is remarkable that so striking and unusual a narrator has been neglected for so long. Mrs Nicholson’s time has come. Attention must be paid.” —Peter Quinn, author of Banished Children of Eve