Monday, January 20, 2020
Across the Barricades is a novel written by Joan Lingard. Essay
Across the Barricades is a novel written by Joan Lingard.    Across The Barricades    'Across the Barricades' is a novel written by Joan Lingard. It is set  in the Belfast area in the 1970's. Catholics want Ireland to be all  together and one country while Protestants want The Northern Ireland  to stay part of Britain. The plot is about 'The Troubles' and a  Protestant girl in love with a Catholic boy. Sadie (Protestant) and  Kevin (Catholic) are separated by the divide. They meet (they used to  know each other a while ago) and become close. This upsets their  families and friends because they are from different sides of the  divide. Kevin and Sadie get threats and Kevin gets beaten up as a  result of this. Sadie know Mr Blake from high school. When Kevin goes  to see Sadie, Mr Blake sees that Kevin is in need and so takes Sadie  and Kevin to his house. After some time, Mr Blake gets too involved  and so gets threats, nearly killed in a car and eventually killed by a  petrol bomb. Kevin and Sadie become sick of Belfast and the violence  and so leave. Kevin and Sadie realize that 'The Troubles' aren't going  to go away and that there's no hope for change in the future.    In this paragraph the importance of the characters will be discussed.  Kevin McCoy is Catholic and works in Mr Kelly's scrapyard. Kate Kelly  likes Kevin but Kevin loves Sadie. "Kate tried to cling to Kevin but  most of the time she irritated him". Kate thus tries to get Kevin into  trouble by telling the police about Brian's gun. "Underneath was a  rifle and several rounds of ammunition. Brian wanted Kevin to rebel  against the Protestants and use the gun but Kevin had rejected his  thoughts. Brian then hid the gun in Mr Kelly's scrapyard. Kevin is  then blamed f...              ...escribes the violence. "There were disturbances in  the night. Sound of gunfire, rumble of cars, shouting in the distance,  flicker of flames against the night sky". This is a good example of  imagery.    I think the author is trying to imply that 'The Troubles' are not  going to go away but will get worse by the language she uses to  describe the areas and the activities. There are constant bombings and  Mr Blake dies. Catholics and Protestants just send a bomb back every  time something happens. Just now the violence has got worse, Joan  Lingard was right!    I don't think that the violence is going to get better because the  deaths are constant as well as the trouble, people are trying to  follow their beliefs by killing other people. There is always going to  be the divide. Kevin and Sadie were right to leave, they realized that  'The Troubles' were getting worse.                      
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