Tan: A Story of Exile, Betrayal and Revenge

Fiction & Literature, Military, Historical
Cover of the book Tan: A Story of Exile, Betrayal and Revenge by David Lawlor, David Lawlor
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: David Lawlor ISBN: 9781301312399
Publisher: David Lawlor Publication: September 15, 2012
Imprint: Smashwords Edition Language: English
Author: David Lawlor
ISBN: 9781301312399
Publisher: David Lawlor
Publication: September 15, 2012
Imprint: Smashwords Edition
Language: English

‘Peelers have a knack for hitting you where it hurts; broken nose, bruised ribs, a few loosened teeth...no more than a rapist deserved, Sergeant Coveney and District Inspector Webber had said. Proper order, too - except the lad was no rapist, and Webber knew it.’

It’s 1914 and Liam Mannion is forced into exile for a crime he didn’t commit. He flees Balbriggan, the only home he has ever known and travels to England, where he enlists and endures the torment of trench warfare in France. Five years later he’s back in England, a changed man, living in the shadow of his battlefield memories. Liam finds work in a Manchester cotton mill but prejudice and illness soon see him destitute. Starving and desperate, he enlists in a new military force heading to Ireland - the Black and Tans - and is posted to the very town he fled as a youth.

While he has been away Liam’s childhood friends have joined the republican cause, while his brother has allied himself to the Crown forces. Liam must wrestle with his own conflicted feelings about duty to the ruthless Tans and loyalty to his friends. The potent combination of ambition, patriotism and betrayal collide, forcing him to act as he comes face to face with the man who spread lies about him all those years before.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

‘Peelers have a knack for hitting you where it hurts; broken nose, bruised ribs, a few loosened teeth...no more than a rapist deserved, Sergeant Coveney and District Inspector Webber had said. Proper order, too - except the lad was no rapist, and Webber knew it.’

It’s 1914 and Liam Mannion is forced into exile for a crime he didn’t commit. He flees Balbriggan, the only home he has ever known and travels to England, where he enlists and endures the torment of trench warfare in France. Five years later he’s back in England, a changed man, living in the shadow of his battlefield memories. Liam finds work in a Manchester cotton mill but prejudice and illness soon see him destitute. Starving and desperate, he enlists in a new military force heading to Ireland - the Black and Tans - and is posted to the very town he fled as a youth.

While he has been away Liam’s childhood friends have joined the republican cause, while his brother has allied himself to the Crown forces. Liam must wrestle with his own conflicted feelings about duty to the ruthless Tans and loyalty to his friends. The potent combination of ambition, patriotism and betrayal collide, forcing him to act as he comes face to face with the man who spread lies about him all those years before.

More books from Historical

Cover of the book Crimson Stained the Bayou Pines by David Lawlor
Cover of the book Nürnberger Tand by David Lawlor
Cover of the book Hedwig Courths-Mahler - Folge 108 by David Lawlor
Cover of the book Taming the Lion by David Lawlor
Cover of the book Fallout by David Lawlor
Cover of the book The Ferry Mystery by David Lawlor
Cover of the book Saving Amelie by David Lawlor
Cover of the book Ruined by a Lady (Spirited Storms #3) by David Lawlor
Cover of the book Flowers of Chivalry by David Lawlor
Cover of the book From The Eagle's Nest: Growing Up In Goldthwaite by David Lawlor
Cover of the book A Lady Undone 7: The Pirate's Captive by David Lawlor
Cover of the book Remembering Korea 1950 by David Lawlor
Cover of the book Valor Under Siege by David Lawlor
Cover of the book The Tower of the Elephant by David Lawlor
Cover of the book Surrender to an Irish Warrior by David Lawlor
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy