![]() ![]() The books two opening chapters focus on the same dinner time in two separate households. Joan Lingard also manages a great balancing act with this novel. The idea that the experience of living in Northern Ireland was valid material for a book – and not a history book! – was beyond me. Up until that point, I believed that everyone I wanted to read about either went to boarding school in England or high school in America. It had never occurred to me that someone could write a book about where I came from. ![]() ![]() Acting as a kind of retelling of the Romeo & Juliet tale, the books follow the lives of Kevin, a Catholic and Sadie a Protestant as they grow up in Northern Ireland in the 1970s, meeting as teenagers and following them until they become adults with children of their own.ĭespite living in Northern Ireland in the 1970s, The Twelfth Day of July struck a chord with me for one main reason. Written by Joan Lingard, who spent her teenage years in Northern Ireland, The Twelfth Day of July is the first in a quintet of books, often known as the ‘Kevin and Sadie’ series. ![]() The Twelfth Day of July was first published in 1970 when I was 9 years old, however I think I was at least 13 when I read it. The book I have chosen for this week’s The Book That Built the Blogger is Joan Lingard’s 1970 book The Twelfth Day of July – another book that would probably be considered YA today but which opened my eyes to the possibilities of where books could go – and more imp ![]()
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