
An Exploration in the Imagination of Iveragh
The Amergin Step is named after the famous poem that Leabhar Gabhála Éireann tells us was recited by the poet and lawmaker of the Gaelic Milesian people, as he stepped ashore in Kerry after their voyage from Galicia.
Contemporary and historical literature, folklore, myth, archaeology and placenames are explored by the author at the same time as he explores the mountains, sea and islands of the tip of the Iveragh peninsula to uncover the stories that have animated them from earliest to present times. The Milesians, Skellig Michael other early Christian sites, as well as the literary voice of the Derrynane O’Connells are among the stories discovered in this spectacular landscape.
The Amergin Step is also a call for an imaginative step into the places we inhabit so that, like Amergin’s poem, we can try to identify with our places rather than own them. Our survival, the book argues, depends on taking this step.
The Amergin Step is published by Dingle Publishing and is available from selected Irish booksellers from 1st September 2024.
Hardback, linen-bound with dust jacket; 397pp with original artwork and maps by Holger Lönze and calligraphy by Timothy O’Neill. Endpapers, marker ribbon, h&t bands; set in 11/14pt Caslon on 100g paper; 234x156mm.
ISBN 978-1-7397813-2-3
RRP €30
Fíonán Locha Luíoch, mo Naomh-sa
No stone is left unturned – literary, mythological, historical and geographical – in this magnificent anatomy of a place, its terrain and its people. No more valuable and compelling book will be published in Ireland this year.
Bernard O’Donoghue
A profound exploration of the time and space of legend and poetry. The Amergin Step enables a reader to step beyond our own time and into the mythic past.
Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin
In this wonderful book, Paddy Bushe allows us to experience a beloved landscape, made all the richer by his poetic eye and his deep knowledge and appreciation.
Eibhear Walshe
Landscape is viewed in this book as the embodiment of story, belief and creative art. This is a very rich publication, informed by an admirable breath of research, but characterised by a lightness of touch.
Heather Laird
The Woman who Danced on the Shore
Lines of Vision and a Stone Butterfly
Most Fantastic and Impossible - Skellig Michael as an Island of the Mind
Ic Tabairt a Choisse Desi in hÉrinn - Milesian Footprints
An Glór Conallach - The Poetic Voice of the O’Connells
Amergin in 2020