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Star of the Sea : A Postcolonial/Postmodern Voyage into the Irish Famine

Star of the Sea Overview

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Version 79

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versionnumberov:versionnumber79
titledcterms:titleStar of the Sea Overview
contentsioc:contentStar of the Sea was written by Joseph O’Connor and published in 2004.  It is a historical fiction novel that chronicles the voyage of a famine ship from Ireland to New York in 1847, which was the height of the potato famine.

The back of the book reads: 

In the bitter winter of 1847, from an Ireland torn by famine and injustice, the Star of the Sea sets sail for the New World.  On board are hundreds of refugees.  Among them are a maid with a devastating secret, the bankrupt Lord Merridith and his wife and children, and a killer who stalks the decks in search of vengeance.  This journey will see many lives end, while others begin anew.  In this spellbinding tale of tragedy and mercy, love and healing, the farther the ship sails towards the Promised Land, the more her passengers seem moored to a past that will never let them go.  (Star of the Sea, fourth cover).

The story is given to us by American journalist G. Grantley Dixon, who is himself a character in the novel, and is a journalistic murder mystery that is “newly revised with many inclusions” in the commemorative 100th edition.  Dixon includes excerpts from the captain’s log, interviews from people connected to the characters, and historical documents and letters.  

The murder mystery in the book is interesting because we know from the beginning that David Merridith is the person who gets murdered.  The mystery in the novel comes from questioning who murders him, why he is murdered, and what past events caused this to be his fate. 

Dixon breaks up telling the chronological voyage of the ship with chapters giving us insight into the characters’ pasts, explaining their stories.  We see the major events that happen in the characters’ lives and also see how all of these characters were affected by the Irish Potato Famine.

Throughout the novel we question the concept of voice - who can be a voice for Ireland, for the famine? Does Dixon have the right to tell this story?

Ultimately this novel portrays the Irish Potato famine experience, the causes of why so many people suffered as much as they did, how it impacted people, and the lasting effect that the past can have on individuals.

The New York Times Book Review sums it up quite nicely:
"Star of the Sea is...an agonizing inquiry into the nature of abandonment and the difficulty of finding anyone who will truly care about the fate of others."

Non-Spoiler Overview  
Spoiler Overview

Works Cited

About the Author Joseph O'Connor

 
 
Writer: Sarah Swansen
Editor: Michaila Gerlach
Web Designers: Madison Luke and Andrew Olsen
default viewscalar:defaultViewimage_header
was attributed toprov:wasAttributedTohttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/users/5781
createddcterms:created2017-01-07T10:34:52-08:00
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Version 78

resourcerdf:resourcehttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/the-star-of-the-sea-overview.78
versionnumberov:versionnumber78
titledcterms:titleStar of the Sea Overview
contentsioc:contentStar of the Sea was written by Joseph O’Connor and published in 2004.  It is a historical fiction novel that chronicles the voyage of a famine ship from Ireland to New York in 1847, which was the height of the potato famine.

The back of the book reads: 

In the bitter winter of 1847, from an Ireland torn by famine and injustice, the Star of the Sea sets sail for the New World.  On board are hundreds of refugees.  Among them are a maid with a devastating secret, the bankrupt Lord Merridith and his wife and children, and a killer who stalks the decks in search of vengeance.  This journey will see many lives end, while others begin anew.  In this spellbinding tale of tragedy and mercy, love and healing, the farther the ship sails towards the Promised Land, the more her passengers seem moored to a past that will never let them go.  (Star of the Sea, fourth cover).

The story is given to us by American journalist G. Grantley Dixon, who is himself a character in the novel, and is a journalistic murder mystery that is “newly revised with many inclusions” in the commemorative 100th edition.  Dixon includes excerpts from the captain’s log, interviews from people connected to the characters, and historical documents and letters.  

The murder mystery in the book is interesting because we know from the beginning that David Merridith is the person who gets murdered.  The mystery in the novel comes from questioning who murders him, why he is murdered, and what past events caused this to be his fate. 

Dixon breaks up telling the chronological voyage of the ship with chapters giving us insight into the characters’ pasts, explaining their stories.  We see the major events that happen in the characters’ lives and also see how all of these characters were affected by the Irish Potato Famine.

Throughout the novel we question the concept of voice - who can be a voice for Ireland, for the famine? Does Dixon have the right to tell this story?

Ultimately this novel portrays the Irish Potato famine experience, the causes of why so many people suffered as much as they did, how it impacted people, and the lasting effect that the past can have on individuals.

The New York Times Book Review sums it up quite nicely:
"Star of the Sea is...an agonizing inquiry into the nature of abandonment and the difficulty of finding anyone who will truly care about the fate of others."

Non-Spoiler Overview  
Spoiler Overview

Works Cited

About the Author Joseph O'Connor

 
 
Writer: Sarah Swansen
Editor: Michaila Gerlach
Web Designers: Madison Luke and Andrew Olsen
default viewscalar:defaultViewimage_header
was attributed toprov:wasAttributedTohttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/users/9473
createddcterms:created2016-04-11T16:51:30-07:00
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Version 77

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versionnumberov:versionnumber77
titledcterms:titleStar of the Sea Overview
contentsioc:contentStar of the Sea was written by Joseph O’Connor and published in 2004.  It is a historical fiction novel that chronicles the voyage of a famine ship from Ireland to New York in 1847, which was the height of the potato famine.

The back of the book reads: 

In the bitter winter of 1847, from an Ireland torn by famine and injustice, the Star of the Sea sets sail for the New World.  On board are hundreds of refugees.  Among them are a maid with a devastating secret, the bankrupt Lord Merridith and his wife and children, and a killer who stalks the decks in search of vengeance.  This journey will see many lives end, while others begin anew.  In this spellbinding tale of tragedy and mercy, love and healing, the farther the ship sails towards the Promised Land, the more her passengers seem moored to a past that will never let them go.  (Star of the Sea, fourth cover).

The story is given to us by American journalist G. Grantley Dixon, who is himself a character in the novel, and is a journalistic murder mystery that is “newly revised with many inclusions” in the commemorative 100th edition.  Dixon includes excerpts from the captain’s log, interviews from people connected to the characters, and historical documents and letters.  

The murder mystery in the book is interesting because we know from the beginning that David Merridith is the person who gets murdered.  The mystery in the novel comes from questioning who murders him, why he is murdered, and what past events caused this to be his fate. 

Dixon breaks up telling the chronological voyage of the ship with chapters giving us insight into the characters’ pasts, explaining their stories.  We see the major events that happen in the characters’ lives and also see how all of these characters were affected by the Irish Potato Famine.

Throughout the novel we question the concept of voice - who can be a voice for Ireland, for the famine? Does Dixon have the right to tell this story?

Ultimately this novel portrays the Irish Potato famine experience, the causes of why so many people suffered as much as they did, how it impacted people, and the lasting effect that the past can have on individuals.

The New York Times Book Review sums it up quite nicely:
"Star of the Sea is...an agonizing inquiry into the nature of abandonment and the difficulty of finding anyone who will truly care about the fate of others."

Non-Spoiler Overview  
Spoiler Overview

Works Cited

About the Author Joseph O'Connor

 
 
Writer: Sarah Swansen
Editor: Michaila Gerlach
Web Designers: Madison Luke and Andrew Olsen
default viewscalar:defaultViewimage_header
was attributed toprov:wasAttributedTohttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/users/5781
createddcterms:created2016-04-09T10:22:20-07:00
typerdf:typehttp://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version

Version 76

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versionnumberov:versionnumber76
titledcterms:titleStar of the Sea Overview
contentsioc:contentStar of the Sea was written by Joseph O’Connor and published in 2004.  It is a historical fiction novel that chronicles the voyage of a famine ship from Ireland to New York in 1847, which was the height of the potato famine.

The back of the book reads: 

In the bitter winter of 1847, from an Ireland torn by famine and injustice, the Star of the Sea sets sail for the New World.  On board are hundreds of refugees.  Among them are a maid with a devastating secret, the bankrupt Lord Merridith and his wife and children, and a killer who stalks the decks in search of vengeance.  This journey will see many lives end, while others begin anew.  In this spellbinding tale of tragedy and mercy, love and healing, the farther the ship sails towards the Promised Land, the more her passengers seem moored to a past that will never let them go.  (Star of the Sea, fourth cover).

The story is given to us by American journalist G. Grantley Dixon, who is himself a character in the novel, and is a journalistic murder mystery that is “newly revised with many inclusions” in the commemorative 100th edition.  Dixon includes excerpts from the captain’s log, interviews from people connected to the characters, and historical documents and letters.  

The murder mystery in the book is interesting because we know from the beginning that David Merridith is the person who gets murdered.  The mystery in the novel comes from questioning who murders him, why he is murdered, and what past events caused this to be his fate. 

Dixon breaks up telling the chronological voyage of the ship with chapters giving us insight into the characters’ pasts, explaining their stories.  We see the major events that happen in the characters’ lives and also see how all of these characters were affected by the Irish Potato Famine.

Throughout the novel we question the concept of voice - who can be a voice for Ireland, for the famine? Does Dixon have the right to tell this story?

Ultimately this novel portrays the Irish Potato famine experience, the causes of why so many people suffered as much as they did, how it impacted people, and the lasting effect that the past can have on individuals.

The New York Times Book Review sums it up quite nicely:
"Star of the Sea is...an agonizing inquiry into the nature of abandonment and the difficulty of finding anyone who will truly care about the fate of others."

Non-Spoiler Overview  
Spoiler Overview

Works Cited

About the Author Joseph O'Connor

 

Writer: Sarah Swansen
Editor: Michaila Gerlach
Web Designers: Madison Luke and Andrew Olsen
default viewscalar:defaultViewimage_header
was attributed toprov:wasAttributedTohttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/users/5781
createddcterms:created2016-04-09T10:20:00-07:00
typerdf:typehttp://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version

Version 75

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versionnumberov:versionnumber75
titledcterms:titleStar of the Sea Overview
contentsioc:contentStar of the Sea was written by Joseph O’Connor and published in 2004.  It is a historical fiction novel that chronicles the voyage of a famine ship from Ireland to New York in 1847, which was the height of the potato famine.

The back of the book reads: 

In the bitter winter of 1847, from an Ireland torn by famine and injustice, the Star of the Sea sets sail for the New World.  On board are hundreds of refugees.  Among them are a maid with a devastating secret, the bankrupt Lord Merridith and his wife and children, and a killer who stalks the decks in search of vengeance.  This journey will see many lives end, while others begin anew.  In this spellbinding tale of tragedy and mercy, love and healing, the farther the ship sails towards the Promised Land, the more her passengers seem moored to a past that will never let them go.  (Star of the Sea, fourth cover).

The story is given to us by American journalist G. Grantley Dixon, who is himself a character in the novel, and is a journalistic murder mystery that is “newly revised with many inclusions” in the commemorative 100th edition.  Dixon includes excerpts from the captain’s log, interviews from people connected to the characters, and historical documents and letters.  

The murder mystery in the book is interesting because we know from the beginning that David Merridith is the person who gets murdered.  The mystery in the novel comes from questioning who murders him, why he is murdered, and what past events caused this to be his fate. 

Dixon breaks up telling the chronological voyage of the ship with chapters giving us insight into the characters’ pasts, explaining their stories.  We see the major events that happen in the characters’ lives and also see how all of these characters were affected by the Irish Potato Famine.

Throughout the novel we question the concept of voice - who can be a voice for Ireland, for the famine? Does Dixon have the right to tell this story?

Ultimately this novel portrays the Irish Potato famine experience, the causes of why so many people suffered as much as they did, how it impacted people, and the lasting effect that the past can have on individuals.

The New York Times Book Review sums it up quite nicely:
"Star of the Sea is...an agonizing inquiry into the nature of abandonment and the difficulty of finding anyone who will truly care about the fate of others."

Non-Spoiler Overview  
Spoiler Overview

Works Cited

About the Author Joseph O'Connor

 
Writer: Sarah Swansen
Editor: Michaila Gerlach
Web Designers: Madison Luke and Andrew Olsen
default viewscalar:defaultViewimage_header
was attributed toprov:wasAttributedTohttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/users/5781
createddcterms:created2016-04-09T10:19:20-07:00
typerdf:typehttp://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version

Version 74

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versionnumberov:versionnumber74
titledcterms:titleStar of the Sea Overview
contentsioc:contentStar of the Sea was written by Joseph O’Connor and published in 2004.  It is a historical fiction novel that chronicles the voyage of a famine ship from Ireland to New York in 1847, which was the height of the potato famine.

The back of the book reads: 

In the bitter winter of 1847, from an Ireland torn by famine and injustice, the Star of the Sea sets sail for the New World.  On board are hundreds of refugees.  Among them are a maid with a devastating secret, the bankrupt Lord Merridith and his wife and children, and a killer who stalks the decks in search of vengeance.  This journey will see many lives end, while others begin anew.  In this spellbinding tale of tragedy and mercy, love and healing, the farther the ship sails towards the Promised Land, the more her passengers seem moored to a past that will never let them go.  (Star of the Sea, fourth cover).

The story is given to us by American journalist G. Grantley Dixon, who is himself a character in the novel, and is a journalistic murder mystery that is “newly revised with many inclusions” in the commemorative 100th edition.  Dixon includes excerpts from the captain’s log, interviews from people connected to the characters, and historical documents and letters.  

The murder mystery in the book is interesting because we know from the beginning that David Merridith is the person who gets murdered.  The mystery in the novel comes from questioning who murders him, why he is murdered, and what past events caused this to be his fate. 

Dixon breaks up telling the chronological voyage of the ship with chapters giving us insight into the characters’ pasts, explaining their stories.  We see the major events that happen in the characters’ lives and also see how all of these characters were affected by the Irish Potato Famine.

Throughout the novel we question the concept of voice - who can be a voice for Ireland, for the famine? Does Dixon have the right to tell this story?

Ultimately this novel portrays the Irish Potato famine experience, the causes of why so many people suffered as much as they did, how it impacted people, and the lasting effect that the past can have on individuals.

The New York Times Book Review sums it up quite nicely:
"Star of the Sea is...an agonizing inquiry into the nature of abandonment and the difficulty of finding anyone who will truly care about the fate of others."

Non-Spoiler Overview  
Spoiler Overview

Works Cited

About the Author Joseph O'Connor

 

Writer: Sarah Swansen
Editor: Michaila Gerlach
Web Designers: Madison Luke and Andrew Olsen

default viewscalar:defaultViewimage_header
was attributed toprov:wasAttributedTohttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/users/5781
createddcterms:created2016-04-09T10:18:42-07:00
typerdf:typehttp://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version

Version 73

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versionnumberov:versionnumber73
titledcterms:titleStar of the Sea Overview
contentsioc:contentStar of the Sea was written by Joseph O’Connor and published in 2004.  It is a historical fiction novel that chronicles the voyage of a famine ship from Ireland to New York in 1847, which was the height of the potato famine.

The back of the book reads: 

In the bitter winter of 1847, from an Ireland torn by famine and injustice, the Star of the Sea sets sail for the New World.  On board are hundreds of refugees.  Among them are a maid with a devastating secret, the bankrupt Lord Merridith and his wife and children, and a killer who stalks the decks in search of vengeance.  This journey will see many lives end, while others begin anew.  In this spellbinding tale of tragedy and mercy, love and healing, the farther the ship sails towards the Promised Land, the more her passengers seem moored to a past that will never let them go.  (Star of the Sea, fourth cover).

The story is given to us by American journalist G. Grantley Dixon, who is himself a character in the novel, and is a journalistic murder mystery that is “newly revised with many inclusions” in the commemorative 100th edition.  Dixon includes excerpts from the captain’s log, interviews from people connected to the characters, and historical documents and letters.  

The murder mystery in the book is interesting because we know from the beginning that David Merridith is the person who gets murdered.  The mystery in the novel comes from questioning who murders him, why he is murdered, and what past events caused this to be his fate. 

Dixon breaks up telling the chronological voyage of the ship with chapters giving us insight into the characters’ pasts, explaining their stories.  We see the major events that happen in the characters’ lives and also see how all of these characters were affected by the Irish Potato Famine.

Throughout the novel we question the concept of voice - who can be a voice for Ireland, for the famine? Does Dixon have the right to tell this story?

Ultimately this novel portrays the Irish Potato famine experience, the causes of why so many people suffered as much as they did, how it impacted people, and the lasting effect that the past can have on individuals.

The New York Times Book Review sums it up quite nicely:
"Star of the Sea is...an agonizing inquiry into the nature of abandonment and the difficulty of finding anyone who will truly care about the fate of others."

Non-Spoiler Overview  
Spoiler Overview

Works Cited

About the Author Joseph O'Connor

 

Writer: Sarah Swansen
Editor: Michaila Gerlach
Web Designers: Madison Luke and Andrew Olsen

default viewscalar:defaultViewimage_header
was attributed toprov:wasAttributedTohttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/users/9473
createddcterms:created2016-04-08T14:30:11-07:00
typerdf:typehttp://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version

Version 72

resourcerdf:resourcehttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/the-star-of-the-sea-overview.72
versionnumberov:versionnumber72
titledcterms:titleStar of the Sea Overview
contentsioc:contentStar of the Sea was written by Joseph O’Connor and published in 2004.  It is a historical fiction novel that chronicles the voyage of a famine ship from Ireland to New York in 1847, which was the height of the potato famine.

The back of the book reads: 

In the bitter winter of 1847, from an Ireland torn by famine and injustice, the Star of the Sea sets sail for the New World.  On board are hundreds of refugees.  Among them are a maid with a devastating secret, the bankrupt Lord Merridith and his wife and children, and a killer who stalks the decks in search of vengeance.  This journey will see many lives end, while others begin anew.  In this spellbinding tale of tragedy and mercy, love and healing, the farther the ship sails towards the Promised Land, the more her passengers seem moored to a past that will never let them go.  (Star of the Sea, fourth cover).

The story is given to us by American journalist G. Grantley Dixon, who is himself a character in the novel, and is a journalistic murder mystery that is “newly revised with many inclusions” in the commemorative 100th edition.  Dixon includes excerpts from the captain’s log, interviews from people connected to the characters, and historical documents and letters.  

The murder mystery in the book is interesting because we know from the beginning that David Merridith is the person who gets murdered.  The mystery in the novel comes from questioning who murders him, why he is murdered, and what past events caused this to be his fate. 

Dixon breaks up telling the chronological voyage of the ship with chapters giving us insight into the characters’ pasts, explaining their stories.  We see the major events that happen in the characters’ lives and also see how all of these characters were affected by the Irish Potato Famine.

Throughout the novel we question the concept of voice - who can be a voice for Ireland, for the famine? Does Dixon have the right to tell this story?

Ultimately this novel portrays the Irish Potato famine experience, the causes of why so many people suffered as much as they did, how it impacted people, and the lasting effect that the past can have on individuals.

The New York Times Book Review sums it up quite nicely:
"Star of the Sea is...an agonizing inquiry into the nature of abandonment and the difficulty of finding anyone who will truly care about the fate of others."

Non-Spoiler Overview  
Spoiler Overview

Works Cited

Writer: Sarah Swansen
Editor: Michaila Gerlach
Web Designers: Madison Luke and Andrew Olsen

default viewscalar:defaultViewimage_header
was attributed toprov:wasAttributedTohttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/users/9473
createddcterms:created2016-04-08T13:59:37-07:00
typerdf:typehttp://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version

Version 71

resourcerdf:resourcehttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/the-star-of-the-sea-overview.71
versionnumberov:versionnumber71
titledcterms:titleStar of the Sea Overview
contentsioc:contentStar of the Sea was written by Joseph O’Connor and published in 2004.  It is a historical fiction novel that chronicles the voyage of a famine ship from Ireland to New York in 1847, which was the height of the potato famine.

The back of the book reads: 

In the bitter winter of 1847, from an Ireland torn by famine and injustice, the Star of the Sea sets sail for the New World.  On board are hundreds of refugees.  Among them are a maid with a devastating secret, the bankrupt Lord Merridith and his wife and children, and a killer who stalks the decks in search of vengeance.  This journey will see many lives end, while others begin anew.  In this spellbinding tale of tragedy and mercy, love and healing, the farther the ship sails towards the Promised Land, the more her passengers seem moored to a past that will never let them go.  (Star of the Sea, fourth cover).

The story is given to us by American journalist G. Grantley Dixon, who is himself a character in the novel, and is a journalistic murder mystery that is “newly revised with many inclusions” in the commemorative 100th edition.  Dixon includes excerpts from the captain’s log, interviews from people connected to the characters, and historical documents and letters.  

The murder mystery in the book is interesting because we know from the beginning that David Merridith is the person who gets murdered.  The mystery in the novel comes from questioning who murders him, why he is murdered, and what past events caused this to be his fate. 

Dixon breaks up telling the chronological voyage of the ship with chapters giving us insight into the characters’ pasts, explaining their stories.  We see the major events that happen in the characters’ lives and also see how all of these characters were affected by the Irish Potato Famine.

Throughout the novel we question the concept of voice - who can be a voice for Ireland, for the famine? Does Dixon have the right to tell this story?

Ultimately this novel portrays the Irish Potato famine experience, the causes of why so many people suffered as much as they did, how it impacted people, and the lasting effect that the past can have on individuals.

The New York Times Book Review sums it up quite nicely:
"Star of the Sea is...an agonizing inquiry into the nature of abandonment and the difficulty of finding anyone who will truly care about the fate of others."

Non-Spoiler Overview  
Spoiler Overview

Works Cited

Writer: Sarah Swansen
Edited by Michaila Gerlach
Web Designers: Madison Luke and Andrew Olsen
default viewscalar:defaultViewimage_header
was attributed toprov:wasAttributedTohttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/users/9829
createddcterms:created2016-03-21T10:50:40-07:00
typerdf:typehttp://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version

Version 70

resourcerdf:resourcehttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/the-star-of-the-sea-overview.70
versionnumberov:versionnumber70
titledcterms:titleStar of the Sea Overview
contentsioc:contentStar of the Sea was written by Joseph O’Connor and published in 2004.  It is a historical fiction novel that chronicles the voyage of a famine ship from Ireland to New York in 1847, which was the height of the potato famine.

In the bitter winter of 1847, from an Ireland torn by famine and injustice, the Star of the Sea sets sail for the New World.  On board are hundreds of refugees.  Among them are a maid with a devastating secret, the bankrupt Lord Merridith and his wife and children, and a killer who stalks the decks in search of vengeance.  This journey will see many lives end, while others begin anew.  In this spellbinding tale of tragedy and mercy, love and healing, the farther the ship sails towards the Promised Land, the more her passengers seem moored to a past that will never let them go. 

The story is given to us by American journalist G. Grantley Dixon, and is a journalistic murder mystery that is “newly revised with many inclusions” in the commemorative 100th edition.  Dixon includes excerpts from the captain’s log, interviews from people connected to the characters, and historical documents and letters.  

The “murder mystery” in the book is interesting because we know from the beginning that David Merridith is the person who gets murdered.  The mystery in the novel comes from questioning who murders him, why he is murdered, and what past events caused this to be his fate. 

Dixon breaks up telling the chronological voyage of the ship with chapters giving us insight into the characters’ pasts, explaining their stories.  We see the major events that happen in the characters’ lives and also see how all of these characters were affected by the Irish Potato Famine.

Throughout the novel we question the concept of voice - who can be a voice for Ireland, for the famine? Does Dixon have the right to tell this story?

Ultimately this novel portrays the Irish Potato famine experience, the causes of why so many people suffered as much as they did, how it impacted people, and the lasting effect that the past can have on individuals.

The New York Times Book Review sums it up quite nicely in their review:
"But Star of the Sea is also an agonizing inquiry into the nature of abandonment and the difficulty of finding anyone who will truly care about the fate of others"

Non-Spoiler Overview  
Spoiler Overview

Works Cited

Researchers/Writers: Sarah Swenson, edited by Michaila Gerlach
Web Designers: Madison Luke and Andrew Olsen
default viewscalar:defaultViewimage_header
was attributed toprov:wasAttributedTohttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/users/9490
createddcterms:created2016-03-18T12:39:08-07:00
typerdf:typehttp://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version

Version 69

resourcerdf:resourcehttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/the-star-of-the-sea-overview.69
versionnumberov:versionnumber69
titledcterms:titleStar of the Sea Overview
descriptiondcterms:descriptionAndrew, Madison, Michaila, and Ben
contentsioc:contentStar of the Sea was written by Joseph O’Connor and published in 2004.  It is a historical fiction novel that chronicles the voyage of a famine ship from Ireland to New York in 1847, which was the height of the potato famine.

In the bitter winter of 1847, from an Ireland torn by famine and injustice, the Star of the Sea sets sail for the New World.  On board are hundreds of refugees.  Among them are a maid with a devastating secret, the bankrupt Lord Merridith and his wife and children, and a killer who stalks the decks in search of vengeance.  This journey will see many lives end, while others begin anew.  In this spellbinding tale of tragedy and mercy, love and healing, the farther the ship sails towards the Promised Land, the more her passengers seem moored to a past that will never let them go. 

The story is given to us by American journalist G. Grantley Dixon, and is a journalistic murder mystery that is “newly revised with many inclusions” in the commemorative 100th edition.  Dixon includes excerpts from the captain’s log, interviews from people connected to the characters, and historical documents and letters.  

The “murder mystery” in the book is interesting because we know from the beginning that David Merridith is the person who gets murdered.  The mystery in the novel comes from questioning who murders him, why he is murdered, and what past events caused this to be his fate. 

Dixon breaks up telling the chronological voyage of the ship with chapters giving us insight into the characters’ pasts, explaining their stories.  We see the major events that happen in the characters’ lives and also see how all of these characters were affected by the Irish Potato Famine.

Throughout the novel we question the concept of voice - who can be a voice for Ireland, for the famine? Does Dixon have the right to tell this story?

Ultimately this novel portrays the Irish Potato famine experience, the causes of why so many people suffered as much as they did, how it impacted people, and the lasting effect that the past can have on individuals.

The New York Times Book Review sums it up quite nicely in their review:
"But Star of the Sea is also an agonizing inquiry into the nature of abandonment and the difficulty of finding anyone who will truly care about the fate of others"

Non-Spoiler Overview  
Spoiler Overview

Works Cited

Researchers/Writers: Sarah Swenson, edited by Michaila Gerlach
Web Designers: Madison Luke and Andrew Olsen
default viewscalar:defaultViewimage_header
was attributed toprov:wasAttributedTohttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/users/9829
createddcterms:created2016-03-17T16:49:28-07:00
typerdf:typehttp://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version

Version 68

resourcerdf:resourcehttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/the-star-of-the-sea-overview.68
versionnumberov:versionnumber68
titledcterms:titleStar of the Sea Overview
descriptiondcterms:descriptionAndrew, Madison, Michaila, and Ben
contentsioc:contentStar of the Sea was written by Joseph O’Connor and published in 2004.  It is a historical fiction novel that chronicles the voyage of a famine ship from Ireland to New York in 1847, which was the height of the potato famine.

In the bitter winter of 1847, from an Ireland torn by famine and injustice, the Star of the Sea sets sail for the New World.  On board are hundreds of refugees.  Among them are a maid with a devastating secret, the bankrupt Lord Merridith and his wife and children, and a killer who stalks the decks in search of vengeance.  This journey will see many lives end, while others begin anew.  In this spellbinding tale of tragedy and mercy, love and healing, the farther the ship sails towards the Promised Land, the more her passengers seem moored to a past that will never let them go. 

The story is given to us by American journalist G. Grantley Dixon, and is a journalistic murder mystery that is “newly revised with many inclusions” in the commemorative 100th edition.  Dixon includes excerpts from the captain’s log, interviews from people connected to the characters, and historical documents and letters.  

The “murder mystery” in the book is interesting because we know from the beginning that David Merridith is the person who gets murdered.  The mystery in the novel comes from questioning who murders him, why he is murdered, and what past events caused this to be his fate. 

Dixon breaks up telling the chronological voyage of the ship with chapters giving us insight into the characters’ pasts, explaining their stories.  We see the major events that happen in the characters’ lives and also see how all of these characters were affected by the Irish Potato Famine.

Throughout the novel we question the concept of voice - who can be a voice for Ireland, for the famine? Does Dixon have the right to tell this story?

Ultimately this novel portrays the Irish Potato famine experience, the causes of why so many people suffered as much as they did, how it impacted people, and the lasting effect that the past can have on individuals.

The New York Times Book Review sums it up quite nicely in their review:
"But Star of the Sea is also an agonizing inquiry into the nature of abandonment and the difficulty of finding anyone who will truly care about the fate of others"

Non-Spoiler Overview  
Spoiler Overview
Works Cited

Researchers/Writers: Sarah Swenson, edited by Michaila Gerlach
Web Designers: Madison Luke and Andrew Olsen
default viewscalar:defaultViewimage_header
was attributed toprov:wasAttributedTohttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/users/9473
createddcterms:created2016-03-16T13:15:11-07:00
typerdf:typehttp://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version

Version 67

resourcerdf:resourcehttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/the-star-of-the-sea-overview.67
versionnumberov:versionnumber67
titledcterms:titleStar of the Sea Overview
descriptiondcterms:descriptionAndrew, Madison, Michaila, Ben,Sarah
contentsioc:contentStar of the Sea was written by Joseph O’Connor and published in 2004.  It is a historical fiction novel that chronicles the voyage of a famine ship from Ireland to New York in 1847, which was the height of the potato famine.

In the bitter winter of 1847, from an Ireland torn by famine and injustice, the Star of the Sea sets sail for the New World.  On board are hundreds of refugees.  Among them are a maid with a devastating secret, the bankrupt Lord Merridith and his wife and children, and a killer who stalks the decks in search of vengeance.  This journey will see many lives end, while others begin anew.  In this spellbinding tale of tragedy and mercy, love and healing, the farther the ship sails towards the Promised Land, the more her passengers seem moored to a past that will never let them go. 

The story is given to us by American journalist G. Grantley Dixon, and is a journalistic murder mystery that is “newly revised with many inclusions” in the commemorative 100th edition.  Dixon includes excerpts from the captain’s log, interviews from people connected to the characters, and historical documents and letters.  

The “murder mystery” in the book is interesting because we know from the beginning that David Merridith is the person who gets murdered.  The mystery in the novel comes from questioning who murders him, why he is murdered, and what past events caused this to be his fate. 

Dixon breaks up telling the chronological voyage of the ship with chapters giving us insight into the characters’ pasts, explaining their stories.  We see the major events that happen in the characters’ lives and also see how all of these characters were affected by the Irish Potato Famine.

Throughout the novel we question the concept of voice - who can be a voice for Ireland, for the famine? Does Dixon have the right to tell this story?

Ultimately this novel portrays the Irish Potato famine experience, the causes of why so many people suffered as much as they did, how it impacted people, and the lasting effect that the past can have on individuals.

The New York Times Book Review sums it up quite nicely in their review:
"But Star of the Sea is also an agonizing inquiry into the nature of abandonment and the difficulty of finding anyone who will truly care about the fate of others"

Non-Spoiler Overview  
Spoiler Overview
Works Cited

Researchers/Writers: Sarah Swenson, edited by Michaila Gerlach
Web Designers: Madison Luke and Andrew Olsen
default viewscalar:defaultViewimage_header
was attributed toprov:wasAttributedTohttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/users/9473
createddcterms:created2016-03-16T13:11:00-07:00
typerdf:typehttp://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version

Version 66

resourcerdf:resourcehttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/the-star-of-the-sea-overview.66
versionnumberov:versionnumber66
titledcterms:titleStar of the Sea Overview
descriptiondcterms:descriptionAndrew, Madison, Michaila, Ben,Sarah
contentsioc:contentStar of the Sea was written by Joseph O’Connor and published in 2004.  It is a historical fiction novel that chronicles the voyage of a famine ship from Ireland to New York in 1847, which was the height of the potato famine.

In the bitter winter of 1847, from an Ireland torn by famine and injustice, the Star of the Sea sets sail for the New World.  On board are hundreds of refugees.  Among them are a maid with a devastating secret, the bankrupt Lord Merridith and his wife and children, and a killer who stalks the decks in search of vengeance.  This journey will see many lives end, while others begin anew.  In this spellbinding tale of tragedy and mercy, love and healing, the farther the ship sails towards the Promised Land, the more her passengers seem moored to a past that will never let them go. 

The story is given to us by American journalist G. Grantley Dixon, and is a journalistic murder mystery that is “newly revised with many inclusions” in the commemorative 100th edition.  Dixon includes excerpts from the captain’s log, interviews from people connected to the characters, and historical documents and letters.  

The “murder mystery” in the book is interesting because we know from the beginning that David Merridith is the person who gets murdered.  The mystery in the novel comes from questioning who murders him, why he is murdered, and what past events caused this to be his fate. 

Dixon breaks up telling the chronological voyage of the ship with chapters giving us insight into the characters’ pasts, explaining their stories.  We see the major events that happen in the characters’ lives and also see how all of these characters were affected by the Irish Potato Famine.

Throughout the novel we question the concept of voice - who can be a voice for Ireland, for the famine? Does Dixon have the right to tell this story?

Ultimately this novel portrays the Irish Potato famine experience, the causes of why so many people suffered as much as they did, how it impacted people, and the lasting effect that the past can have on individuals.

The New York Times Book Review sums it up quite nicely in their review:
"But Star of the Sea is also an agonizing inquiry into the nature of abandonment and the difficulty of finding anyone who will truly care about the fate of others"

Non-Spoiler Overview  
Spoiler Overview
Works Cited

Researchers/Writers: Sarah Swenson, edited by Michaila Gerlach
Web Designers: Madison Luke and Andrew Olsen
default viewscalar:defaultViewplain
was attributed toprov:wasAttributedTohttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/users/9473
createddcterms:created2016-03-16T13:10:33-07:00
typerdf:typehttp://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version

Version 65

resourcerdf:resourcehttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/the-star-of-the-sea-overview.65
versionnumberov:versionnumber65
titledcterms:titleStar of the Sea Overview
descriptiondcterms:descriptionAndrew, Madison, Michaila, Ben,Sarah
contentsioc:contentStar of the Sea was written by Joseph O’Connor and published in 2004.  It is a historical fiction novel that chronicles the voyage of a famine ship from Ireland to New York in 1847, which was the height of the potato famine.

In the bitter winter of 1847, from an Ireland torn by famine and injustice, the Star of the Sea sets sail for the New World.  On board are hundreds of refugees.  Among them are a maid with a devastating secret, the bankrupt Lord Merridith and his wife and children, and a killer who stalks the decks in search of vengeance.  This journey will see many lives end, while others begin anew.  In this spellbinding tale of tragedy and mercy, love and healing, the farther the ship sails towards the Promised Land, the more her passengers seem moored to a past that will never let them go. 

The story is given to us by American journalist G. Grantley Dixon, and is a journalistic murder mystery that is “newly revised with many inclusions” in the commemorative 100th edition.  Dixon includes excerpts from the captain’s log, interviews from people connected to the characters, and historical documents and letters.  

The “murder mystery” in the book is interesting because we know from the beginning that David Merridith is the person who gets murdered.  The mystery in the novel comes from questioning who murders him, why he is murdered, and what past events caused this to be his fate. 

Dixon breaks up telling the chronological voyage of the ship with chapters giving us insight into the characters’ pasts, explaining their stories.  We see the major events that happen in the characters’ lives and also see how all of these characters were affected by the Irish Potato Famine.

Throughout the novel we question the concept of voice - who can be a voice for Ireland, for the famine? Does Dixon have the right to tell this story?

Ultimately this novel portrays the Irish Potato famine experience, the causes of why so many people suffered as much as they did, how it impacted people, and the lasting effect that the past can have on individuals.

The New York Times Book Review sums it up quite nicely in their review:
"But Star of the Sea is also an agonizing inquiry into the nature of abandonment and the difficulty of finding anyone who will truly care about the fate of others"

Non-Spoiler Overview  
Spoiler Overview
Works Cited

Researchers/Writers: Sarah Swenson, edited by Michaila Gerlach
Web Designers: Madison Luke and Andrew Olsen
default viewscalar:defaultViewplain
was attributed toprov:wasAttributedTohttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/users/9473
createddcterms:created2016-03-14T13:26:07-07:00
typerdf:typehttp://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version

Version 64

resourcerdf:resourcehttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/the-star-of-the-sea-overview.64
versionnumberov:versionnumber64
titledcterms:titleStar of the Sea Overview
descriptiondcterms:descriptionAndrew, Madison, Michaila, Ben,Sarah
contentsioc:contentStar of the Sea was written by Joseph O’Connor and published in 2004.  It is a historical fiction novel that chronicles the voyage of a famine ship from Ireland to New York in 1847, which was the height of the potato famine.

In the bitter winter of 1847, from an Ireland torn by famine and injustice, the Star of the Sea sets sail for the New World.  On board are hundreds of refugees.  Among them are a maid with a devastating secret, the bankrupt Lord Merridith and his wife and children, and a killer who stalks the decks in search of vengeance.  This journey will see many lives end, while others begin anew.  In this spellbinding tale of tragedy and mercy, love and healing, the farther the ship sails towards the Promised Land, the more her passengers seem moored to a past that will never let them go. 

The story is given to us by American journalist G. Grantley Dixon, and is a journalistic murder mystery that is “newly revised with many inclusions” in the commemorative 100th edition.  Dixon includes excerpts from the captain’s log, interviews from people connected to the characters, and historical documents and letters.  

The “murder mystery” in the book is interesting because we know from the beginning that David Merridith is the person who gets murdered.  The mystery in the novel comes from questioning who murders him, why he is murdered, and what past events caused this to be his fate. 

Dixon breaks up telling the chronological voyage of the ship with chapters giving us insight into the characters’ pasts, explaining their stories.  We see the major events that happen in the characters’ lives and also see how all of these characters were affected by the Irish Potato Famine.

Throughout the novel we question the concept of voice - who can be a voice for Ireland, for the famine? Does Dixon have the right to tell this story?

Ultimately this novel portrays the Irish Potato famine experience, the causes of why so many people suffered as much as they did, how it impacted people, and the lasting effect that the past can have on individuals.

The New York Times Book Review sums it up quite nicely in their review:
"But Star of the Sea is also an agonizing inquiry into the nature of abandonment and the difficulty of finding anyone who will truly care about the fate of others"

Non-Spoiler Overview  
Spoiler Overview
Works Cited

Researchers/Writers: Sarah Swenson, edited by Michaila Gerlach
Web Designers: Madison Luke and Andrew Olsen
default viewscalar:defaultViewplain
was attributed toprov:wasAttributedTohttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/users/9490
createddcterms:created2016-03-14T13:07:32-07:00
typerdf:typehttp://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version

Version 63

resourcerdf:resourcehttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/the-star-of-the-sea-overview.63
versionnumberov:versionnumber63
titledcterms:titleStar of the Sea Overview
descriptiondcterms:descriptionAndrew, Madison, Michaila, Ben,Sarah
contentsioc:contentStar of the Sea was written by Joseph O’Connor and published in 2004.  It is a historical fiction novel that chronicles the voyage of a famine ship from Ireland to New York in 1847, which was the height of the potato famine.

In the bitter winter of 1847, from an Ireland torn by famine and injustice, the Star of the Sea sets sail for the New World.  On board are hundreds of refugees.  Among them are a maid with a devastating secret, the bankrupt Lord Merridith and his wife and children, and a killer who stalks the decks in search of vengeance.  This journey will see many lives end, while others begin anew.  In this spellbinding tale of tragedy and mercy, love and healing, the farther the ship sails towards the Promised Land, the more her passengers seem moored to a past that will never let them go. 

The story is given to us by American journalist G. Grantley Dixon, and is a journalistic murder mystery that is “newly revised with many inclusions” in the commemorative 100th edition.  Dixon includes excerpts from the captain’s log, interviews from people connected to the characters, and historical documents and letters.  

The “murder mystery” in the book is interesting because we know from the beginning that David Merridith is the person who gets murdered.  The mystery in the novel comes from questioning who murders him, why he is murdered, and what past events caused this to be his fate. 

Dixon breaks up telling the chronological voyage of the ship with chapters giving us insight into the characters’ pasts, explaining their stories.  We see the major events that happen in the characters’ lives and also see how all of these characters were affected by the Irish Potato Famine.

Throughout the novel we question the concept of voice - who can be a voice for Ireland, for the famine? Does Dixon have the right to tell this story?

Ultimately this novel portrays the Irish Potato famine experience, the causes of why so many people suffered as much as they did, how it impacted people, and the lasting effect that the past can have on individuals.

The New York Times Book Review sums it up quite nicely in their review:
"But Star of the Sea is also an agonizing inquiry into the nature of abandonment and the difficulty of finding anyone who will truly care about the fate of others"

Non-Spoiler Overview  
Spoiler Overview
Works Cited

Researchers/Writers: Sarah Swenson, edited by Michaila Gerlach
Web Designers: Madison Luke and Andrew Olsen
default viewscalar:defaultViewplain
was attributed toprov:wasAttributedTohttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/users/9490
createddcterms:created2016-03-14T13:03:06-07:00
typerdf:typehttp://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version

Version 62

resourcerdf:resourcehttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/the-star-of-the-sea-overview.62
versionnumberov:versionnumber62
titledcterms:titleStar of the Sea Overview
descriptiondcterms:descriptionAndrew, Madison, Michaila, Ben,Sarah
contentsioc:contentStar of the Sea was written by Joseph O’Connor and published in 2004.  It is a historical fiction novel that chronicles the voyage of a famine ship from Ireland to New York in 1847, which was the height of the potato famine.

In the bitter winter of 1847, from an Ireland torn by famine and injustice, the Star of the Sea sets sail for the New World.  On board are hundreds of refugees.  Among them are a maid with a devastating secret, the bankrupt Lord Merridith and his wife and children, and a killer who stalks the decks in search of vengeance.  This journey will see many lives end, while others begin anew.  In this spellbinding tale of tragedy and mercy, love and healing, the farther the ship sails towards the Promised Land, the more her passengers seem moored to a past that will never let them go. 

The story is given to us by American journalist G. Grantley Dixon, and is a journalistic murder mystery that is “newly revised with many inclusions” in the commemorative 100th edition.  Dixon includes excerpts from the captain’s log, interviews from people connected to the characters, and historical documents and letters.  

The “murder mystery” in the book is interesting because we know from the beginning that David Merridith is the person who gets murdered.  The mystery in the novel comes from questioning who murders him, why he is murdered, and what past events caused this to be his fate. 

Dixon breaks up telling the chronological voyage of the ship with chapters giving us insight into the characters’ pasts, explaining their stories.  We see the major events that happen in the characters’ lives and also see how all of these characters were affected by the Irish Potato Famine.

Throughout the novel we question the concept of voice - who can be a voice for Ireland, for the famine? Does Dixon have the right to tell this story?

Ultimately this novel portrays the Irish Potato famine experience, the causes of why so many people suffered as much as they did, how it impacted people, and the lasting effect that the past can have on individuals.

The New York Times Book Review sums it up quite nicely in their review:
"But Star of the Sea is also an agonizing inquiry into the nature of abandonment and the difficulty of finding anyone who will truly care about the fate of others"

Non-Spoiler Overview  
Spoiler Overview
Works Cited

Researchers/Writers: Sarah Swenson, edited by Michaila Gerlach
Web Designers: Madison Luke and Andrew Olsen
default viewscalar:defaultViewplain
was attributed toprov:wasAttributedTohttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/users/9490
createddcterms:created2016-03-14T13:02:48-07:00
typerdf:typehttp://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version

Version 61

resourcerdf:resourcehttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/the-star-of-the-sea-overview.61
versionnumberov:versionnumber61
titledcterms:titleStar of the Sea Overview
descriptiondcterms:descriptionAndrew, Madison, Michaila, Ben,Sarah
contentsioc:contentStar of the Sea was written by Joseph O’Connor and published in 2004.  It is a historical fiction novel that chronicles the voyage of a famine ship from Ireland to New York in 1847, which was the height of the potato famine.

In the bitter winter of 1847, from an Ireland torn by famine and injustice, the Star of the Sea sets sail for the New World.  On board are hundreds of refugees.  Among them are a maid with a devastating secret, the bankrupt Lord Merridith and his wife and children, and a killer who stalks the decks in search of vengeance.  This journey will see many lives end, while others begin anew.  In this spellbinding tale of tragedy and mercy, love and healing, the farther the ship sails towards the Promised Land, the more her passengers seem moored to a past that will never let them go. 

The story is given to us by American journalist G. Grantley Dixon, and is a journalistic murder mystery that is “newly revised with many inclusions” in the commemorative 100th edition.  Dixon includes excerpts from the captain’s log, interviews from people connected to the characters, and historical documents and letters.  

The “murder mystery” in the book is interesting because we know from the beginning that David Merridith is the person who gets murdered.  The mystery in the novel comes from questioning who murders him, why he is murdered, and what past events caused this to be his fate. 

Dixon breaks up telling the chronological voyage of the ship with chapters giving us insight into the characters’ pasts, explaining their stories.  We see the major events that happen in the characters’ lives and also see how all of these characters were affected by the Irish Potato Famine.

Throughout the novel we question the concept of voice - who can be a voice for Ireland, for the famine? Does Dixon have the right to tell this story?

Ultimately this novel portrays the Irish Potato famine experience, the causes of why so many people suffered as much as they did, how it impacted people, and the lasting effect that the past can have on individuals.

The New York Times Book Review sums it up quite nicely in their review:
"But Star of the Sea is also an agonizing inquiry into the nature of abandonment and the difficulty of finding anyone who will truly care about the fate of others"

Non-Spoiler Overview  
Spoiler Overview
Works Cited







Researchers/Writers: Sarah Swenson, edited by Michaila Gerlach
Web Designers: Madison Luke and Andrew Olsen
default viewscalar:defaultViewplain
was attributed toprov:wasAttributedTohttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/users/9490
createddcterms:created2016-03-14T13:02:27-07:00
typerdf:typehttp://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version

Version 60

resourcerdf:resourcehttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/the-star-of-the-sea-overview.60
versionnumberov:versionnumber60
titledcterms:titleStar of the Sea Overview
descriptiondcterms:descriptionAndrew, Madison, Michaila, Ben,Sarah
contentsioc:contentStar of the Sea was written by Joseph O’Connor and published in 2004.  It is a historical fiction novel that chronicles the voyage of a famine ship from Ireland to New York in 1847, which was the height of the potato famine.

In the bitter winter of 1847, from an Ireland torn by famine and injustice, the Star of the Sea sets sail for the New World.  On board are hundreds of refugees.  Among them are a maid with a devastating secret, the bankrupt Lord Merridith and his wife and children, and a killer who stalks the decks in search of vengeance.  This journey will see many lives end, while others begin anew.  In this spellbinding tale of tragedy and mercy, love and healing, the farther the ship sails towards the Promised Land, the more her passengers seem moored to a past that will never let them go. 

The story is given to us by American journalist G. Grantley Dixon, and is a journalistic murder mystery that is “newly revised with many inclusions” in the commemorative 100th edition.  Dixon includes excerpts from the captain’s log, interviews from people connected to the characters, and historical documents and letters.  

The “murder mystery” in the book is interesting because we know from the beginning that David Merridith is the person who gets murdered.  The mystery in the novel comes from questioning who murders him, why he is murdered, and what past events caused this to be his fate. 

Dixon breaks up telling the chronological voyage of the ship with chapters giving us insight into the characters’ pasts, explaining their stories.  We see the major events that happen in the characters’ lives and also see how all of these characters were affected by the Irish Potato Famine.

Throughout the novel we question the concept of voice - who can be a voice for Ireland, for the famine? Does Dixon have the right to tell this story?

Ultimately this novel portrays the Irish Potato famine experience, the causes of why so many people suffered as much as they did, how it impacted people, and the lasting effect that the past can have on individuals.

The New York Times Book Review sums it up quite nicely in their review:
"But Star of the Sea is also an agonizing inquiry into the nature of abandonment and the difficulty of finding anyone who will truly care about the fate of others"

Non-Spoiler Overview  
Spoiler Overview
Works Cited

Researchers/Writers: Sarah Swenson, edited by Michaila Gerlach
Web Designers: Madison Luke and Andrew Olsen
default viewscalar:defaultViewplain
was attributed toprov:wasAttributedTohttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/users/9490
createddcterms:created2016-03-14T13:02:07-07:00
typerdf:typehttp://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version

Version 59

resourcerdf:resourcehttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/the-star-of-the-sea-overview.59
versionnumberov:versionnumber59
titledcterms:titleStar of the Sea Overview
descriptiondcterms:descriptionAndrew, Madison, Michaila, Ben,Sarah
contentsioc:contentStar of the Sea was written by Joseph O’Connor and published in 2004.  It is a historical fiction novel that chronicles the voyage of a famine ship from Ireland to New York in 1847, which was the height of the potato famine.

In the bitter winter of 1847, from an Ireland torn by famine and injustice, the Star of the Sea sets sail for the New World.  On board are hundreds of refugees.  Among them are a maid with a devastating secret, the bankrupt Lord Merridith and his wife and children, and a killer who stalks the decks in search of vengeance.  This journey will see many lives end, while others begin anew.  In this spellbinding tale of tragedy and mercy, love and healing, the farther the ship sails towards the Promised Land, the more her passengers seem moored to a past that will never let them go. 

The story is given to us by American journalist G. Grantley Dixon, and is a journalistic murder mystery that is “newly revised with many inclusions” in the commemorative 100th edition.  Dixon includes excerpts from the captain’s log, interviews from people connected to the characters, and historical documents and letters.  

The “murder mystery” in the book is interesting because we know from the beginning that David Merridith is the person who gets murdered.  The mystery in the novel comes from questioning who murders him, why he is murdered, and what past events caused this to be his fate. 

Dixon breaks up telling the chronological voyage of the ship with chapters giving us insight into the characters’ pasts, explaining their stories.  We see the major events that happen in the characters’ lives and also see how all of these characters were affected by the Irish Potato Famine.

Throughout the novel we question the concept of voice - who can be a voice for Ireland, for the famine? Does Dixon have the right to tell this story?

Ultimately this novel portrays the Irish Potato famine experience, the causes of why so many people suffered as much as they did, how it impacted people, and the lasting effect that the past can have on individuals.

The New York Times Book Review sums it up quite nicely in their review:
"But Star of the Sea is also an agonizing inquiry into the nature of abandonment and the difficulty of finding anyone who will truly care about the fate of others"

Non-Spoiler Overview  
Spoiler Overview
Works Cited

Authors: Sarah Swenson, edited by Michaila Gerlach
Web Designers: Madison Luke and Andrew Olsen
default viewscalar:defaultViewplain
was attributed toprov:wasAttributedTohttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/users/9473
createddcterms:created2016-03-08T19:57:58-08:00
typerdf:typehttp://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version

Version 58

resourcerdf:resourcehttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/the-star-of-the-sea-overview.58
versionnumberov:versionnumber58
titledcterms:titleStar of the Sea Overview
descriptiondcterms:descriptionAndrew, Madison, Michaila, Ben,Sarah
contentsioc:contentStar of the Sea was written by Joseph O’Connor and published in 2004.  It is a historical fiction novel that chronicles the voyage of a famine ship from Ireland to New York in 1847, which was the height of the potato famine.

In the bitter winter of 1847, from an Ireland torn by famine and injustice, the Star of the Sea sets sail for the New World.  On board are hundreds of refugees.  Among them are a maid with a devastating secret, the bankrupt Lord Merridith and his wife and children, and a killer who stalks the decks in search of vengeance.  This journey will see many lives end, while others begin anew.  In this spellbinding tale of tragedy and mercy, love and healing, the farther the ship sails towards the Promised Land, the more her passengers seem moored to a past that will never let them go. 

The story is given to us by American journalist G. Grantley Dixon, and is a journalistic murder mystery that is “newly revised with many inclusions” in the commemorative 100th edition.  Dixon includes excerpts from the captain’s log, interviews from people connected to the characters, and historical documents and letters.  

The “murder mystery” in the book is interesting because we know from the beginning that David Merridith is the person who gets murdered.  The mystery in the novel comes from questioning who murders him, why he is murdered, and what past events caused this to be his fate. 

Dixon breaks up telling the chronological voyage of the ship with chapters giving us insight into the characters’ pasts, explaining their stories.  We see the major events that happen in the characters’ lives and also see how all of these characters were affected by the Irish Potato Famine.

Throughout the novel we question the concept of voice - who can be a voice for Ireland, for the famine? Does Dixon have the right to tell this story?

Ultimately this novel portrays the Irish Potato famine experience, the causes of why so many people suffered as much as they did, how it impacted people, and the lasting effect that the past can have on individuals.

The New York Times Book Review sums it up quite nicely in their review:
"But Star of the Sea is also an agonizing inquiry into the nature of abandonment and the difficulty of finding anyone who will truly care about the fate of others"

Non-Spoiler Overview  
Spoiler Overview
Works Cited

Authors: Sarah Swenson, edited by Michaila Gerlach
Web Designers: Madison Luke and Andrew Olsen
default viewscalar:defaultViewplain
was attributed toprov:wasAttributedTohttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/users/9490
createddcterms:created2016-03-07T13:24:55-08:00
typerdf:typehttp://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version

Version 57

resourcerdf:resourcehttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/the-star-of-the-sea-overview.57
versionnumberov:versionnumber57
titledcterms:titleStar of the Sea Overview
descriptiondcterms:descriptionAndrew, Madison, Michaila, Ben,Sarah
contentsioc:contentStar of the Sea was written by Joseph O’Connor and published in 2004.  It is a historical fiction novel that chronicles the voyage of a famine ship from Ireland to New York in 1847, which was the height of the potato famine.

In the bitter winter of 1847, from an Ireland torn by famine and injustice, the Star of the Sea sets sail for the New World.  On board are hundreds of refugees.  Among them are a maid with a devastating secret, the bankrupt Lord Merridith and his wife and children, and a killer who stalks the decks in search of vengeance.  This journey will see many lives end, while others begin anew.  In this spellbinding tale of tragedy and mercy, love and healing, the farther the ship sails towards the Promised Land, the more her passengers seem moored to a past that will never let them go. 

The story is given to us by American journalist G. Grantley Dixon, and is a journalistic murder mystery that is “newly revised with many inclusions” in the commemorative 100th edition.  Dixon includes excerpts from the captain’s log, interviews from people connected to the characters, and historical documents and letters.  

The “murder mystery” in the book is interesting because we know from the beginning that David Merridith is the person who gets murdered.  The mystery in the novel comes from questioning who murders him, why he is murdered, and what past events caused this to be his fate. 

Dixon breaks up telling the chronological voyage of the ship with chapters giving us insight into the characters’ pasts, explaining their stories.  We see the major events that happen in the characters’ lives and also see how all of these characters were affected by the Irish Potato Famine.

Throughout the novel we question the concept of voice - who can be a voice for Ireland, for the famine? Does Dixon have the right to tell this story?

Ultimately this novel portrays the Irish Potato famine experience, the causes of why so many people suffered as much as they did, how it impacted people, and the lasting effect that the past can have on individuals.

The New York Times Book Review sums it up quite nicely in their review:
"But Star of the Sea is also an agonizing inquiry into the nature of abandonment and the difficulty of finding anyone who will truly care about the fate of others"

Non-Spoiler Overview  
Spoiler Overview
Works Cited

Authors: Sarah Swenson, edited by Michaila Gerlach
Web Designers: Madison Luke and Andrew Olsen
default viewscalar:defaultViewplain
was attributed toprov:wasAttributedTohttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/users/9490
createddcterms:created2016-03-07T13:24:30-08:00
typerdf:typehttp://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version

Version 56

resourcerdf:resourcehttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/the-star-of-the-sea-overview.56
versionnumberov:versionnumber56
titledcterms:titleStar of the Sea Overview
descriptiondcterms:descriptionAndrew, Madison, Michaila, Ben,Sarah
contentsioc:contentStar of the Sea was written by Joseph O’Connor and published in 2004.  It is a historical fiction novel that chronicles the voyage of a famine ship from Ireland to New York in 1847, which was the height of the potato famine.

In the bitter winter of 1847, from an Ireland torn by famine and injustice, the Star of the Sea sets sail for the New World.  On board are hundreds of refugees.  Among them are a maid with a devastating secret, the bankrupt Lord Merridith and his wife and children, and a killer who stalks the decks in search of vengeance.  This journey will see many lives end, while others begin anew.  In this spellbinding tale of tragedy and mercy, love and healing, the farther the ship sails towards the Promised Land, the more her passengers seem moored to a past that will never let them go. 

The story is given to us by American journalist G. Grantley Dixon, and is a journalistic murder mystery that is “newly revised with many inclusions” in the commemorative 100th edition.  Dixon includes excerpts from the captain’s log, interviews from people connected to the characters, and historical documents and letters.  

The “murder mystery” in the book is interesting because we know from the beginning that David Merridith is the person who gets murdered.  The mystery in the novel comes from questioning who murders him, why he is murdered, and what past events caused this to be his fate. 

Dixon breaks up telling the chronological voyage of the ship with chapters giving us insight into the characters’ pasts, explaining their stories.  We see the major events that happen in the characters’ lives and also see how all of these characters were affected by the Irish Potato Famine.

Throughout the novel we question the concept of voice - who can be a voice for Ireland, for the famine? Does Dixon have the right to tell this story?

Ultimately this novel portrays the Irish Potato famine experience, the causes of why so many people suffered as much as they did, how it impacted people, and the lasting effect that the past can have on individuals.

The New York Times Book Review sums it up quite nicely in their review:
"But Star of the Sea is also an agonizing inquiry into the nature of abandonment and the difficulty of finding anyone who will truly care about the fate of others"

Non-Spoiler Overview                                                            
Spoiler Overview
Works Cited

Authors: Sarah Swenson, edited by Michaila Gerlach
Web Designers: Madison Luke and Andrew Olsen
default viewscalar:defaultViewplain
was attributed toprov:wasAttributedTohttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/users/9490
createddcterms:created2016-03-07T13:22:33-08:00
typerdf:typehttp://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version

Version 55

resourcerdf:resourcehttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/the-star-of-the-sea-overview.55
versionnumberov:versionnumber55
titledcterms:titleStar of the Sea Overview
descriptiondcterms:descriptionAndrew, Madison, Michaila, Ben,Sarah
contentsioc:contentStar of the Sea was written by Joseph O’Connor and published in 2004.  It is a historical fiction novel that chronicles the voyage of a famine ship from Ireland to New York in 1847, which was the height of the potato famine.

In the bitter winter of 1847, from an Ireland torn by famine and injustice, the Star of the Sea sets sail for the New World.  On board are hundreds of refugees.  Among them are a maid with a devastating secret, the bankrupt Lord Merridith and his wife and children, and a killer who stalks the decks in search of vengeance.  This journey will see many lives end, while others begin anew.  In this spellbinding tale of tragedy and mercy, love and healing, the farther the ship sails towards the Promised Land, the more her passengers seem moored to a past that will never let them go. 

The story is given to us by American journalist G. Grantley Dixon, and is a journalistic murder mystery that is “newly revised with many inclusions” in the commemorative 100th edition.  Dixon includes excerpts from the captain’s log, interviews from people connected to the characters, and historical documents and letters.  

The “murder mystery” in the book is interesting because we know from the beginning that David Merridith is the person who gets murdered.  The mystery in the novel comes from questioning who murders him, why he is murdered, and what past events caused this to be his fate. 

Dixon breaks up telling the chronological voyage of the ship with chapters giving us insight into the characters’ pasts, explaining their stories.  We see the major events that happen in the characters’ lives and also see how all of these characters were affected by the Irish Potato Famine.

Throughout the novel we question the concept of voice - who can be a voice for Ireland, for the famine? Does Dixon have the right to tell this story?

Ultimately this novel portrays the Irish Potato famine experience, the causes of why so many people suffered as much as they did, how it impacted people, and the lasting effect that the past can have on individuals.

The New York Times Book Review sums it up quite nicely in their review:
"But Star of the Sea is also an agonizing inquiry into the nature of abandonment and the difficulty of finding anyone who will truly care about the fate of others"

Non-Spoiler Overview                                                            
Spoiler Overview
Works Cited

Authors: Sarah Swenson, edited by Michaila Gerlach
Web Designers: Madison Luke and Andrew Olsen
default viewscalar:defaultViewresources
was attributed toprov:wasAttributedTohttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/users/9490
createddcterms:created2016-03-07T13:22:06-08:00
typerdf:typehttp://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version

Version 54

resourcerdf:resourcehttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/the-star-of-the-sea-overview.54
versionnumberov:versionnumber54
titledcterms:titleStar of the Sea Overview
descriptiondcterms:descriptionAndrew, Madison, Michaila, Ben,Sarah
contentsioc:contentStar of the Sea was written by Joseph O’Connor and published in 2004.  It is a historical fiction novel that chronicles the voyage of a famine ship from Ireland to New York in 1847, which was the height of the potato famine.

In the bitter winter of 1847, from an Ireland torn by famine and injustice, the Star of the Sea sets sail for the New World.  On board are hundreds of refugees.  Among them are a maid with a devastating secret, the bankrupt Lord Merridith and his wife and children, and a killer who stalks the decks in search of vengeance.  This journey will see many lives end, while others begin anew.  In this spellbinding tale of tragedy and mercy, love and healing, the farther the ship sails towards the Promised Land, the more her passengers seem moored to a past that will never let them go. 

The story is given to us by American journalist G. Grantley Dixon, and is a journalistic murder mystery that is “newly revised with many inclusions” in the commemorative 100th edition.  Dixon includes excerpts from the captain’s log, interviews from people connected to the characters, and historical documents and letters.  

The “murder mystery” in the book is interesting because we know from the beginning that David Merridith is the person who gets murdered.  The mystery in the novel comes from questioning who murders him, why he is murdered, and what past events caused this to be his fate. 

Dixon breaks up telling the chronological voyage of the ship with chapters giving us insight into the characters’ pasts, explaining their stories.  We see the major events that happen in the characters’ lives and also see how all of these characters were affected by the Irish Potato Famine.

Throughout the novel we question the concept of voice - who can be a voice for Ireland, for the famine? Does Dixon have the right to tell this story?

Ultimately this novel portrays the Irish Potato famine experience, the causes of why so many people suffered as much as they did, how it impacted people, and the lasting effect that the past can have on individuals.

The New York Times Book Review sums it up quite nicely in their review:
"But Star of the Sea is also an agonizing inquiry into the nature of abandonment and the difficulty of finding anyone who will truly care about the fate of others"

Non-Spoiler Overview                                                            
Spoiler Overview
Works Cited

Authors: Sarah Swenson, edited by Michaila Gerlach
Web Designers: Madison Luke and Andrew Olsen
default viewscalar:defaultViewplain
was attributed toprov:wasAttributedTohttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/users/9490
createddcterms:created2016-03-07T13:21:01-08:00
typerdf:typehttp://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version

Version 53

resourcerdf:resourcehttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/the-star-of-the-sea-overview.53
versionnumberov:versionnumber53
titledcterms:titleStar of the Sea Overview
descriptiondcterms:descriptionAndrew, Madison, Michaila, Ben,Sarah
contentsioc:contentStar of the Sea was written by Joseph O’Connor and published in 2004.  It is a historical fiction novel that chronicles the voyage of a famine ship from Ireland to New York in 1847, which was the height of the potato famine.

In the bitter winter of 1847, from an Ireland torn by famine and injustice, the Star of the Sea sets sail for the New World.  On board are hundreds of refugees.  Among them are a maid with a devastating secret, the bankrupt Lord Merridith and his wife and children, and a killer who stalks the decks in search of vengeance.  This journey will see many lives end, while others begin anew.  In this spellbinding tale of tragedy and mercy, love and healing, the farther the ship sails towards the Promised Land, the more her passengers seem moored to a past that will never let them go. 

The story is given to us by American journalist G. Grantley Dixon, and is a journalistic murder mystery that is “newly revised with many inclusions” in the commemorative 100th edition.  Dixon includes excerpts from the captain’s log, interviews from people connected to the characters, and historical documents and letters.  

The “murder mystery” in the book is interesting because we know from the beginning that David Merridith is the person who gets murdered.  The mystery in the novel comes from questioning who murders him, why he is murdered, and what past events caused this to be his fate. 

Dixon breaks up telling the chronological voyage of the ship with chapters giving us insight into the characters’ pasts, explaining their stories.  We see the major events that happen in the characters’ lives and also see how all of these characters were affected by the Irish Potato Famine.

Throughout the novel we question the concept of voice - who can be a voice for Ireland, for the famine? Does Dixon have the right to tell this story?

Ultimately this novel portrays the Irish Potato famine experience, the causes of why so many people suffered as much as they did, how it impacted people, and the lasting effect that the past can have on individuals.

The New York Times Book Review sums it up quite nicely in their review:
"But Star of the Sea is also an agonizing inquiry into the nature of abandonment and the difficulty of finding anyone who will truly care about the fate of others"

Non-Spoiler Overview                                                            
Spoiler Overview
Works Cited

Authors: Sarah Swenson, edited by Michaila Gerlach
Web Designers: Madison Luke and Andrew Olsen
default viewscalar:defaultViewplain
was attributed toprov:wasAttributedTohttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/users/9490
createddcterms:created2016-03-07T13:18:49-08:00
typerdf:typehttp://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version

Version 52

resourcerdf:resourcehttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/the-star-of-the-sea-overview.52
versionnumberov:versionnumber52
titledcterms:titleStar of the Sea Overview
descriptiondcterms:descriptionAndrew, Madison, Michaila, Ben,Sarah
contentsioc:contentStar of the Sea was written by Joseph O’Connor and published in 2004.  It is a historical fiction novel that chronicles the voyage of a famine ship from Ireland to New York in 1847, which was the height of the potato famine.

In the bitter winter of 1847, from an Ireland torn by famine and injustice, the Star of the Sea sets sail for the New World.  On board are hundreds of refugees.  Among them are a maid with a devastating secret, the bankrupt Lord Merridith and his wife and children, and a killer who stalks the decks in search of vengeance.  This journey will see many lives end, while others begin anew.  In this spellbinding tale of tragedy and mercy, love and healing, the farther the ship sails towards the Promised Land, the more her passengers seem moored to a past that will never let them go. 

The story is given to us by American journalist G. Grantley Dixon, and is a journalistic murder mystery that is “newly revised with many inclusions” in the commemorative 100th edition.  Dixon includes excerpts from the captain’s log, interviews from people connected to the characters, and historical documents and letters.  

The “murder mystery” in the book is interesting because we know from the beginning that David Merridith is the person who gets murdered.  The mystery in the novel comes from questioning who murders him, why he is murdered, and what past events caused this to be his fate. 

Dixon breaks up telling the chronological voyage of the ship with chapters giving us insight into the characters’ pasts, explaining their stories.  We see the major events that happen in the characters’ lives and also see how all of these characters were affected by the Irish Potato Famine.

Throughout the novel we question the concept of voice - who can be a voice for Ireland, for the famine? Does Dixon have the right to tell this story?

Ultimately this novel portrays the Irish Potato famine experience, the causes of why so many people suffered as much as they did, how it impacted people, and the lasting effect that the past can have on individuals.

The New York Times Book Review sums it up quite nicely in their review:
"But Star of the Sea is also an agonizing inquiry into the nature of abandonment and the difficulty of finding anyone who will truly care about the fate of others"

Non-Spoiler Overview                                                            
Spoiler Overview
Works Cited

Authors: Sarah Swenson, edited by Michaila Gerlach
Web Designers: Madison Luke and Andrew Olsen
default viewscalar:defaultViewplain
was attributed toprov:wasAttributedTohttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/users/9490
createddcterms:created2016-03-07T13:16:07-08:00
typerdf:typehttp://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version

Version 51

resourcerdf:resourcehttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/the-star-of-the-sea-overview.51
versionnumberov:versionnumber51
titledcterms:titleStar of the Sea Overview
descriptiondcterms:descriptionAndrew, Madison, Michaila, Ben,Sarah
contentsioc:contentStar of the Sea was written by Joseph O’Connor and published in 2004.  It is a historical fiction novel that chronicles the voyage of a famine ship from Ireland to New York in 1847, which was the height of the potato famine.

In the bitter winter of 1847, from an Ireland torn by famine and injustice, the Star of the Sea sets sail for the New World.  On board are hundreds of refugees.  Among them are a maid with a devastating secret, the bankrupt Lord Merridith and his wife and children, and a killer who stalks the decks in search of vengeance.  This journey will see many lives end, while others begin anew.  In this spellbinding tale of tragedy and mercy, love and healing, the farther the ship sails towards the Promised Land, the more her passengers seem moored to a past that will never let them go. 

The story is given to us by American journalist G. Grantley Dixon, and is a journalistic murder mystery that is “newly revised with many inclusions” in the commemorative 100th edition.  Dixon includes excerpts from the captain’s log, interviews from people connected to the characters, and historical documents and letters.  

The “murder mystery” in the book is interesting because we know from the beginning that David Merridith is the person who gets murdered.  The mystery in the novel comes from questioning who murders him, why he is murdered, and what past events caused this to be his fate. 

Dixon breaks up telling the chronological voyage of the ship with chapters giving us insight into the characters’ pasts, explaining their stories.  We see the major events that happen in the characters’ lives and also see how all of these characters were affected by the Irish Potato Famine.

Throughout the novel we question the concept of voice - who can be a voice for Ireland, for the famine? Does Dixon have the right to tell this story?

Ultimately this novel portrays the Irish Potato famine experience, the causes of why so many people suffered as much as they did, how it impacted people, and the lasting effect that the past can have on individuals.

The New York Times Book Review sums it up quite nicely in their review:
"But Star of the Sea is also an agonizing inquiry into the nature of abandonment and the difficulty of finding anyone who will truly care about the fate of others"

Non-Spoiler Overview                                                            
Spoiler Overview
Works Cited

Authors: Sarah Swenson, edited by Michaila Gerlach
Web Designers: Madison Luke and Andrew Olsen
default viewscalar:defaultViewplain
was attributed toprov:wasAttributedTohttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/users/9490
createddcterms:created2016-03-07T13:15:25-08:00
typerdf:typehttp://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version

Version 50

resourcerdf:resourcehttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/the-star-of-the-sea-overview.50
versionnumberov:versionnumber50
titledcterms:titleStar of the Sea Overview
descriptiondcterms:descriptionAndrew, Madison, Michaila, Ben,Sarah
contentsioc:content

Star of the Sea was written by Joseph O’Connor and published in 2004.  It is a historical fiction novel that chronicles the voyage of a famine ship from Ireland to New York in 1847, which was the height of the potato famine.

In the bitter winter of 1847, from an Ireland torn by famine and injustice, the Star of the Sea sets sail for the New World.  On board are hundreds of refugees.  Among them are a maid with a devastating secret, the bankrupt Lord Merridith and his wife and children, and a killer who stalks the decks in search of vengeance.  This journey will see many lives end, while others begin anew.  In this spellbinding tale of tragedy and mercy, love and healing, the farther the ship sails towards the Promised Land, the more her passengers seem moored to a past that will never let them go. 

The story is given to us by American journalist G. Grantley Dixon, and is a journalistic murder mystery that is “newly revised with many inclusions” in the commemorative 100th edition.  Dixon includes excerpts from the captain’s log, interviews from people connected to the characters, and historical documents and letters.  

The “murder mystery” in the book is interesting because we know from the beginning that David Merridith is the person who gets murdered.  The mystery in the novel comes from questioning who murders him, why he is murdered, and what past events caused this to be his fate. 

Dixon breaks up telling the chronological voyage of the ship with chapters giving us insight into the characters’ pasts, explaining their stories.  We see the major events that happen in the characters’ lives and also see how all of these characters were affected by the Irish Potato Famine.

Throughout the novel we question the concept of voice - who can be a voice for Ireland, for the famine? Does Dixon have the right to tell this story?

Ultimately this novel portrays the Irish Potato famine experience, the causes of why so many people suffered as much as they did, how it impacted people, and the lasting effect that the past can have on individuals.

The New York Times Book Review sums it up quite nicely in their review:
"But Star of the Sea is also an agonizing inquiry into the nature of abandonment and the difficulty of finding anyone who will truly care about the fate of others"

Non-Spoiler Overview                                                            
Spoiler Overview
Works Cited

Authors: Sarah Swenson, edited by Michaila Gerlach
Web Designers: Madison Luke and Andrew Olsen
default viewscalar:defaultViewplain
was attributed toprov:wasAttributedTohttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/users/9490
createddcterms:created2016-03-07T13:14:56-08:00
typerdf:typehttp://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version

Version 49

resourcerdf:resourcehttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/the-star-of-the-sea-overview.49
versionnumberov:versionnumber49
titledcterms:titleStar of the Sea Overview
descriptiondcterms:descriptionAndrew, Madison, Michaila, Ben,Sarah
contentsioc:content

Star of the Sea was written by Joseph O’Connor and published in 2004.  It is a historical fiction novel that chronicles the voyage of a famine ship from Ireland to New York in 1847, which was the height of the potato famine.

In the bitter winter of 1847, from an Ireland torn by famine and injustice, the Star of the Sea sets sail for the New World.  On board are hundreds of refugees.  Among them are a maid with a devastating secret, the bankrupt Lord Merridith and his wife and children, and a killer who stalks the decks in search of vengeance.  This journey will see many lives end, while others begin anew.  In this spellbinding tale of tragedy and mercy, love and healing, the farther the ship sails towards the Promised Land, the more her passengers seem moored to a past that will never let them go. 

The story is given to us by American journalist G. Grantley Dixon, and is a journalistic murder mystery that is “newly revised with many inclusions” in the commemorative 100th edition.  Dixon includes excerpts from the captain’s log, interviews from people connected to the characters, and historical documents and letters.  

The “murder mystery” in the book is interesting because we know from the beginning that David Merridith is the person who gets murdered.  The mystery in the novel comes from questioning who murders him, why he is murdered, and what past events caused this to be his fate. 

Dixon breaks up telling the chronological voyage of the ship with chapters giving us insight into the characters’ pasts, explaining their stories.  We see the major events that happen in the characters’ lives and also see how all of these characters were affected by the Irish Potato Famine.

Throughout the novel we question the concept of voice - who can be a voice for Ireland, for the famine? Does Dixon have the right to tell this story?

Ultimately this novel portrays the Irish Potato famine experience, the causes of why so many people suffered as much as they did, how it impacted people, and the lasting effect that the past can have on individuals.

The New York Times Book Review sums it up quite nicely in their review:
"But Star of the Sea is also an agonizing inquiry into the nature of abandonment and the difficulty of finding anyone who will truly care about the fate of others"

Non-Spoiler Overview                                                            
Spoiler Overview
Works Cited

Authors: Sarah Swenson, edited by Michaila Gerlach
Web Designers: Madison Luke and Andrew Olsen
default viewscalar:defaultViewplain
was attributed toprov:wasAttributedTohttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/users/9490
createddcterms:created2016-03-07T13:13:43-08:00
typerdf:typehttp://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version

Version 48

resourcerdf:resourcehttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/the-star-of-the-sea-overview.48
versionnumberov:versionnumber48
titledcterms:titleStar of the Sea Overview
descriptiondcterms:descriptionAndrew, Madison, Michaila, Ben,Sarah
contentsioc:content

Star of the Sea was written by Joseph O’Connor and published in 2004.  It is a historical fiction novel that chronicles the voyage of a famine ship from Ireland to New York in 1847, which was the height of the potato famine.

In the bitter winter of 1847, from an Ireland torn by famine and injustice, the Star of the Sea sets sail for the New World.  On board are hundreds of refugees.  Among them are a maid with a devastating secret, the bankrupt Lord Merridith and his wife and children, and a killer who stalks the decks in search of vengeance.  This journey will see many lives end, while others begin anew.  In this spellbinding tale of tragedy and mercy, love and healing, the farther the ship sails towards the Promised Land, the more her passengers seem moored to a past that will never let them go. 

The story is given to us by American journalist G. Grantley Dixon, and is a journalistic murder mystery that is “newly revised with many inclusions” in the commemorative 100th edition.  Dixon includes excerpts from the captain’s log, interviews from people connected to the characters, and historical documents and letters.  

The “murder mystery” in the book is interesting because we know from the beginning that David Merridith is the person who gets murdered.  The mystery in the novel comes from questioning who murders him, why he is murdered, and what past events caused this to be his fate. 

Dixon breaks up telling the chronological voyage of the ship with chapters giving us insight into the characters’ pasts, explaining their stories.  We see the major events that happen in the characters’ lives and also see how all of these characters were affected by the Irish Potato Famine.

Throughout the novel we question the concept of voice - who can be a voice for Ireland, for the famine? Does Dixon have the right to tell this story?

Ultimately this novel portrays the Irish Potato famine experience, the causes of why so many people suffered as much as they did, how it impacted people, and the lasting effect that the past can have on individuals.

The New York Times Book Review sums it up quite nicely in their review:
"But Star of the Sea is also an agonizing inquiry into the nature of abandonment and the difficulty of finding anyone who will truly care about the fate of others"

Non-Spoiler Overview                                                            
Spoiler Overview
Works Cited

Authors: Sarah Swenson, edited by Michaila Gerlach
Web Designers: Madison Luke and Andrew Olsen
default viewscalar:defaultViewplain
was attributed toprov:wasAttributedTohttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/users/9490
createddcterms:created2016-03-07T13:13:30-08:00
typerdf:typehttp://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version

Version 47

resourcerdf:resourcehttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/the-star-of-the-sea-overview.47
versionnumberov:versionnumber47
titledcterms:titleStar of the Sea Overview
descriptiondcterms:descriptionAndrew, Madison, Michaila, Ben,Sarah
contentsioc:content

Star of the Sea was written by Joseph O’Connor and published in 2004.  It is a historical fiction novel that chronicles the voyage of a famine ship from Ireland to New York in 1847, which was the height of the potato famine.

In the bitter winter of 1847, from an Ireland torn by famine and injustice, the Star of the Sea sets sail for the New World.  On board are hundreds of refugees.  Among them are a maid with a devastating secret, the bankrupt Lord Merridith and his wife and children, and a killer who stalks the decks in search of vengeance.  This journey will see many lives end, while others begin anew.  In this spellbinding tale of tragedy and mercy, love and healing, the farther the ship sails towards the Promised Land, the more her passengers seem moored to a past that will never let them go. 

The story is given to us by American journalist G. Grantley Dixon, and is a journalistic murder mystery that is “newly revised with many inclusions” in the commemorative 100th edition.  Dixon includes excerpts from the captain’s log, interviews from people connected to the characters, and historical documents and letters.  

The “murder mystery” in the book is interesting because we know from the beginning that David Merridith is the person who gets murdered.  The mystery in the novel comes from questioning who murders him, why he is murdered, and what past events caused this to be his fate. 

Dixon breaks up telling the chronological voyage of the ship with chapters giving us insight into the characters’ pasts, explaining their stories.  We see the major events that happen in the characters’ lives and also see how all of these characters were affected by the Irish Potato Famine.

Throughout the novel we question the concept of voice - who can be a voice for Ireland, for the famine? Does Dixon have the right to tell this story?

Ultimately this novel portrays the Irish Potato famine experience, the causes of why so many people suffered as much as they did, how it impacted people, and the lasting effect that the past can have on individuals.

The New York Times Book Review sums it up quite nicely in their review:
"But Star of the Sea is also an agonizing inquiry into the nature of abandonment and the difficulty of finding anyone who will truly care about the fate of others"

Non-Spoiler Overview                                                            
Spoiler Overview
Works Cited

Authors: Sarah Swenson, edited by Michaila Gerlach
Web Designers: Madison Luke and Andrew Olsen
default viewscalar:defaultViewplain
was attributed toprov:wasAttributedTohttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/users/9490
createddcterms:created2016-03-07T13:13:14-08:00
typerdf:typehttp://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version

Version 46

resourcerdf:resourcehttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/the-star-of-the-sea-overview.46
versionnumberov:versionnumber46
titledcterms:titleStar of the Sea Overview
descriptiondcterms:descriptionAndrew, Madison, Michaila, Ben,Sarah
contentsioc:content

Star of the Sea was written by Joseph O’Connor and published in 2004.  It is a historical fiction novel that chronicles the voyage of a famine ship from Ireland to New York in 1847, which was the height of the potato famine.

In the bitter winter of 1847, from an Ireland torn by famine and injustice, the Star of the Sea sets sail for the New World.  On board are hundreds of refugees.  Among them are a maid with a devastating secret, the bankrupt Lord Merridith and his wife and children, and a killer who stalks the decks in search of vengeance.  This journey will see many lives end, while others begin anew.  In this spellbinding tale of tragedy and mercy, love and healing, the farther the ship sails towards the Promised Land, the more her passengers seem moored to a past that will never let them go. 

The story is given to us by American journalist G. Grantley Dixon, and is a journalistic murder mystery that is “newly revised with many inclusions” in the commemorative 100th edition.  Dixon includes excerpts from the captain’s log, interviews from people connected to the characters, and historical documents and letters.  

The “murder mystery” in the book is interesting because we know from the beginning that David Merridith is the person who gets murdered.  The mystery in the novel comes from questioning who murders him, why he is murdered, and what past events caused this to be his fate. 

Dixon breaks up telling the chronological voyage of the ship with chapters giving us insight into the characters’ pasts, explaining their stories.  We see the major events that happen in the characters’ lives and also see how all of these characters were affected by the Irish Potato Famine.

Throughout the novel we question the concept of voice - who can be a voice for Ireland, for the famine? Does Dixon have the right to tell this story?

Ultimately this novel portrays the Irish Potato famine experience, the causes of why so many people suffered as much as they did, how it impacted people, and the lasting effect that the past can have on individuals.

The New York Times Book Review sums it up quite nicely in their review:
"But Star of the Sea is also an agonizing inquiry into the nature of abandonment and the difficulty of finding anyone who will truly care about the fate of others"

Non-Spoiler Overview                                                            
Spoiler Overview
Works Cited

Authors: Sarah Swenson, edited by Michaila Gerlach
Web Designers: Madison Luke and Andrew Olsen
default viewscalar:defaultViewplain
was attributed toprov:wasAttributedTohttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/users/9490
createddcterms:created2016-03-07T13:12:39-08:00
typerdf:typehttp://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version

Version 45

resourcerdf:resourcehttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/the-star-of-the-sea-overview.45
versionnumberov:versionnumber45
titledcterms:titleStar of the Sea Overview
descriptiondcterms:descriptionAndrew, Madison, Michaila, Ben,Sarah
contentsioc:content

Star of the Sea was written by Joseph O’Connor and published in 2004.  It is a historical fiction novel that chronicles the voyage of a famine ship from Ireland to New York in 1847, which was the height of the potato famine.

In the bitter winter of 1847, from an Ireland torn by famine and injustice, the Star of the Sea sets sail for the New World.  On board are hundreds of refugees.  Among them are a maid with a devastating secret, the bankrupt Lord Merridith and his wife and children, and a killer who stalks the decks in search of vengeance.  This journey will see many lives end, while others begin anew.  In this spellbinding tale of tragedy and mercy, love and healing, the farther the ship sails towards the Promised Land, the more her passengers seem moored to a past that will never let them go. 

The story is given to us by American journalist G. Grantley Dixon, and is a journalistic murder mystery that is “newly revised with many inclusions” in the commemorative 100th edition.  Dixon includes excerpts from the captain’s log, interviews from people connected to the characters, and historical documents and letters.  

The “murder mystery” in the book is interesting because we know from the beginning that David Merridith is the person who gets murdered.  The mystery in the novel comes from questioning who murders him, why he is murdered, and what past events caused this to be his fate. 

Dixon breaks up telling the chronological voyage of the ship with chapters giving us insight into the characters’ pasts, explaining their stories.  We see the major events that happen in the characters’ lives and also see how all of these characters were affected by the Irish Potato Famine.

Throughout the novel we question the concept of voice - who can be a voice for Ireland, for the famine? Does Dixon have the right to tell this story?

Ultimately this novel portrays the Irish Potato famine experience, the causes of why so many people suffered as much as they did, how it impacted people, and the lasting effect that the past can have on individuals.

The New York Times Book Review sums it up quite nicely in their review:
"But Star of the Sea is also an agonizing inquiry into the nature of abandonment and the difficulty of finding anyone who will truly care about the fate of others"

Non-Spoiler Overview                                                            
Spoiler Overview
Works Cited

Authors: Sarah Swenson, edited by Michaila Gerlach
Web Designers: Madison Luke and Andrew Olsen
default viewscalar:defaultViewplain
was attributed toprov:wasAttributedTohttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/users/9490
createddcterms:created2016-03-07T13:11:47-08:00
typerdf:typehttp://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version

Version 44

resourcerdf:resourcehttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/the-star-of-the-sea-overview.44
versionnumberov:versionnumber44
titledcterms:titleStar of the Sea Overview
descriptiondcterms:descriptionAndrew, Madison, Michaila, Ben,Sarah
contentsioc:content

Star of the Sea was written by Joseph O’Connor and published in 2004.  It is a historical fiction novel that chronicles the voyage of a famine ship from Ireland to New York in 1847, which was the height of the potato famine.

In the bitter winter of 1847, from an Ireland torn by famine and injustice, the Star of the Sea sets sail for the New World.  On board are hundreds of refugees.  Among them are a maid with a devastating secret, the bankrupt Lord Merridith and his wife and children, and a killer who stalks the decks in search of vengeance.  This journey will see many lives end, while others begin anew.  In this spellbinding tale of tragedy and mercy, love and healing, the farther the ship sails towards the Promised Land, the more her passengers seem moored to a past that will never let them go. 

The story is given to us by American journalist G. Grantley Dixon, and is a journalistic murder mystery that is “newly revised with many inclusions” in the commemorative 100th edition.  Dixon includes excerpts from the captain’s log, interviews from people connected to the characters, and historical documents and letters.  

The “murder mystery” in the book is interesting because we know from the beginning that David Merridith is the person who gets murdered.  The mystery in the novel comes from questioning who murders him, why he is murdered, and what past events caused this to be his fate. 

Dixon breaks up telling the chronological voyage of the ship with chapters giving us insight into the characters’ pasts, explaining their stories.  We see the major events that happen in the characters’ lives and also see how all of these characters were affected by the Irish Potato Famine.

Throughout the novel we question the concept of voice - who can be a voice for Ireland, for the famine? Does Dixon have the right to tell this story?

Ultimately this novel portrays the Irish Potato famine experience, the causes of why so many people suffered as much as they did, how it impacted people, and the lasting effect that the past can have on individuals.

The New York Times Book Review sums it up quite nicely in their review:
"But Star of the Sea is also an agonizing inquiry into the nature of abandonment and the difficulty of finding anyone who will truly care about the fate of others"

Non-Spoiler Overview                                                            
Spoiler Overview
Works Cited

Authors: Sarah Swenson, edited by Michaila Gerlach
Web Designers: Madison Luke and Andrew Olsen
default viewscalar:defaultViewplain
was attributed toprov:wasAttributedTohttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/users/9490
createddcterms:created2016-03-07T13:10:31-08:00
typerdf:typehttp://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version

Version 43

resourcerdf:resourcehttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/the-star-of-the-sea-overview.43
versionnumberov:versionnumber43
titledcterms:titleStar of the Sea Overview
descriptiondcterms:descriptionAndrew, Madison, Michaila, Ben,Sarah
contentsioc:content

Non-Spoiler Overview                                                            
Spoiler Overview
Works Cited


Star of the Sea
was written by Joseph O’Connor and published in 2004.  It is a historical fiction novel that chronicles the voyage of a famine ship from Ireland to New York in 1847, which was the height of the potato famine.

In the bitter winter of 1847, from an Ireland torn by famine and injustice, the Star of the Sea sets sail for the New World.  On board are hundreds of refugees.  Among them are a maid with a devastating secret, the bankrupt Lord Merridith and his wife and children, and a killer who stalks the decks in search of vengeance.  This journey will see many lives end, while others begin anew.  In this spellbinding tale of tragedy and mercy, love and healing, the farther the ship sails towards the Promised Land, the more her passengers seem moored to a past that will never let them go. 

The story is given to us by American journalist G. Grantley Dixon, and is a journalistic murder mystery that is “newly revised with many inclusions” in the commemorative 100th edition.  Dixon includes excerpts from the captain’s log, interviews from people connected to the characters, and historical documents and letters.  

The “murder mystery” in the book is interesting because we know from the beginning that David Merridith is the person who gets murdered.  The mystery in the novel comes from questioning who murders him, why he is murdered, and what past events caused this to be his fate. 

Dixon breaks up telling the chronological voyage of the ship with chapters giving us insight into the characters’ pasts, explaining their stories.  We see the major events that happen in the characters’ lives and also see how all of these characters were affected by the Irish Potato Famine.

Throughout the novel we question the concept of voice - who can be a voice for Ireland, for the famine? Does Dixon have the right to tell this story?

Ultimately this novel portrays the Irish Potato famine experience, the causes of why so many people suffered as much as they did, how it impacted people, and the lasting effect that the past can have on individuals.

The New York Times Book Review sums it up quite nicely in their review:
"But Star of the Sea is also an agonizing inquiry into the nature of abandonment and the difficulty of finding anyone who will truly care about the fate of others"

Authors: Sarah Swenson, edited by Michaila Gerlach
Web Designers: Madison Luke and Andrew Olsen
default viewscalar:defaultViewplain
was attributed toprov:wasAttributedTohttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/users/9490
createddcterms:created2016-03-07T13:10:06-08:00
typerdf:typehttp://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version

Version 42

resourcerdf:resourcehttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/the-star-of-the-sea-overview.42
versionnumberov:versionnumber42
titledcterms:titleStar of the Sea Overview
descriptiondcterms:descriptionAndrew, Madison, Michaila, Ben,Sarah
contentsioc:content

Star of the Sea was written by Joseph O’Connor and published in 2004.  It is a historical fiction novel that chronicles the voyage of a famine ship from Ireland to New York in 1847, which was the height of the potato famine.

In the bitter winter of 1847, from an Ireland torn by famine and injustice, the Star of the Sea sets sail for the New World.  On board are hundreds of refugees.  Among them are a maid with a devastating secret, the bankrupt Lord Merridith and his wife and children, and a killer who stalks the decks in search of vengeance.  This journey will see many lives end, while others begin anew.  In this spellbinding tale of tragedy and mercy, love and healing, the farther the ship sails towards the Promised Land, the more her passengers seem moored to a past that will never let them go. 

The story is given to us by American journalist G. Grantley Dixon, and is a journalistic murder mystery that is “newly revised with many inclusions” in the commemorative 100th edition.  Dixon includes excerpts from the captain’s log, interviews from people connected to the characters, and historical documents and letters.  

The “murder mystery” in the book is interesting because we know from the beginning that David Merridith is the person who gets murdered.  The mystery in the novel comes from questioning who murders him, why he is murdered, and what past events caused this to be his fate. 

Dixon breaks up telling the chronological voyage of the ship with chapters giving us insight into the characters’ pasts, explaining their stories.  We see the major events that happen in the characters’ lives and also see how all of these characters were affected by the Irish Potato Famine.

Throughout the novel we question the concept of voice - who can be a voice for Ireland, for the famine? Does Dixon have the right to tell this story?

Ultimately this novel portrays the Irish Potato famine experience, the causes of why so many people suffered as much as they did, how it impacted people, and the lasting effect that the past can have on individuals.

The New York Times Book Review sums it up quite nicely in their review:
"But Star of the Sea is also an agonizing inquiry into the nature of abandonment and the difficulty of finding anyone who will truly care about the fate of others"

Non-Spoiler Overview                                                            
Spoiler Overview
Works Cited

Authors: Sarah Swenson, edited by Michaila Gerlach
Web Designers: Madison Luke and Andrew Olsen
default viewscalar:defaultViewplain
was attributed toprov:wasAttributedTohttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/users/9490
createddcterms:created2016-03-07T13:09:37-08:00
typerdf:typehttp://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version

Version 41

resourcerdf:resourcehttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/the-star-of-the-sea-overview.41
versionnumberov:versionnumber41
titledcterms:titleStar of the Sea Overview
descriptiondcterms:descriptionAndrew, Madison, Michaila, Ben,Sarah
contentsioc:content

Star of the Sea was written by Joseph O’Connor and published in 2004.  It is a historical fiction novel that chronicles the voyage of a famine ship from Ireland to New York in 1847, which was the height of the potato famine.

In the bitter winter of 1847, from an Ireland torn by famine and injustice, the Star of the Sea sets sail for the New World.  On board are hundreds of refugees.  Among them are a maid with a devastating secret, the bankrupt Lord Merridith and his wife and children, and a killer who stalks the decks in search of vengeance.  This journey will see many lives end, while others begin anew.  In this spellbinding tale of tragedy and mercy, love and healing, the farther the ship sails towards the Promised Land, the more her passengers seem moored to a past that will never let them go. 

The story is given to us by American journalist G. Grantley Dixon, and is a journalistic murder mystery that is “newly revised with many inclusions” in the commemorative 100th edition.  Dixon includes excerpts from the captain’s log, interviews from people connected to the characters, and historical documents and letters.  

The “murder mystery” in the book is interesting because we know from the beginning that David Merridith is the person who gets murdered.  The mystery in the novel comes from questioning who murders him, why he is murdered, and what past events caused this to be his fate. 

Dixon breaks up telling the chronological voyage of the ship with chapters giving us insight into the characters’ pasts, explaining their stories.  We see the major events that happen in the characters’ lives and also see how all of these characters were affected by the Irish Potato Famine.

Throughout the novel we question the concept of voice - who can be a voice for Ireland, for the famine? Does Dixon have the right to tell this story?

Ultimately this novel portrays the Irish Potato famine experience, the causes of why so many people suffered as much as they did, how it impacted people, and the lasting effect that the past can have on individuals.

The New York Times Book Review sums it up quite nicely in their review:
"But Star of the Sea is also an agonizing inquiry into the nature of abandonment and the difficulty of finding anyone who will truly care about the fate of others"

Non-Spoiler Overview                                                            
Spoiler Overview
Works Cited

Authors: Sarah Swenson, edited by Michaila Gerlach
Web Designers: Madison Luke and Andrew Olsen
default viewscalar:defaultViewplain
was attributed toprov:wasAttributedTohttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/users/9490
createddcterms:created2016-03-07T13:08:55-08:00
typerdf:typehttp://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version

Version 40

resourcerdf:resourcehttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/the-star-of-the-sea-overview.40
versionnumberov:versionnumber40
titledcterms:titleStar of the Sea Overview
descriptiondcterms:descriptionAndrew, Madison, Michaila, Ben,Sarah
contentsioc:content

Star of the Sea was written by Joseph O’Connor and published in 2004.  It is a historical fiction novel that chronicles the voyage of a famine ship from Ireland to New York in 1847, which was the height of the potato famine.

In the bitter winter of 1847, from an Ireland torn by famine and injustice, the Star of the Sea sets sail for the New World.  On board are hundreds of refugees.  Among them are a maid with a devastating secret, the bankrupt Lord Merridith and his wife and children, and a killer who stalks the decks in search of vengeance.  This journey will see many lives end, while others begin anew.  In this spellbinding tale of tragedy and mercy, love and healing, the farther the ship sails towards the Promised Land, the more her passengers seem moored to a past that will never let them go. 

The story is given to us by American journalist G. Grantley Dixon, and is a journalistic murder mystery that is “newly revised with many inclusions” in the commemorative 100th edition.  Dixon includes excerpts from the captain’s log, interviews from people connected to the characters, and historical documents and letters.  

The “murder mystery” in the book is interesting because we know from the beginning that David Merridith is the person who gets murdered.  The mystery in the novel comes from questioning who murders him, why he is murdered, and what past events caused this to be his fate. 

Dixon breaks up telling the chronological voyage of the ship with chapters giving us insight into the characters’ pasts, explaining their stories.  We see the major events that happen in the characters’ lives and also see how all of these characters were affected by the Irish Potato Famine.

Throughout the novel we question the concept of voice - who can be a voice for Ireland, for the famine? Does Dixon have the right to tell this story?

Ultimately this novel portrays the Irish Potato famine experience, the causes of why so many people suffered as much as they did, how it impacted people, and the lasting effect that the past can have on individuals.

The New York Times Book Review sums it up quite nicely in their review:
"But Star of the Sea is also an agonizing inquiry into the nature of abandonment and the difficulty of finding anyone who will truly care about the fate of others"

Non-Spoiler Overview    
                                                         
Spoiler Overview
Works Cited

Authors: Sarah Swenson, edited by Michaila Gerlach
Web Designers: Madison Luke and Andrew Olsen
default viewscalar:defaultViewplain
was attributed toprov:wasAttributedTohttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/users/9490
createddcterms:created2016-03-07T13:08:42-08:00
typerdf:typehttp://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version

Version 39

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titledcterms:titleStar of the Sea Overview
descriptiondcterms:descriptionAndrew, Madison, Michaila, Ben,Sarah
contentsioc:content

Star of the Sea was written by Joseph O’Connor and published in 2004.  It is a historical fiction novel that chronicles the voyage of a famine ship from Ireland to New York in 1847, which was the height of the potato famine.

In the bitter winter of 1847, from an Ireland torn by famine and injustice, the Star of the Sea sets sail for the New World.  On board are hundreds of refugees.  Among them are a maid with a devastating secret, the bankrupt Lord Merridith and his wife and children, and a killer who stalks the decks in search of vengeance.  This journey will see many lives end, while others begin anew.  In this spellbinding tale of tragedy and mercy, love and healing, the farther the ship sails towards the Promised Land, the more her passengers seem moored to a past that will never let them go. 

The story is given to us by American journalist G. Grantley Dixon, and is a journalistic murder mystery that is “newly revised with many inclusions” in the commemorative 100th edition.  Dixon includes excerpts from the captain’s log, interviews from people connected to the characters, and historical documents and letters.  

The “murder mystery” in the book is interesting because we know from the beginning that David Merridith is the person who gets murdered.  The mystery in the novel comes from questioning who murders him, why he is murdered, and what past events caused this to be his fate. 

Dixon breaks up telling the chronological voyage of the ship with chapters giving us insight into the characters’ pasts, explaining their stories.  We see the major events that happen in the characters’ lives and also see how all of these characters were affected by the Irish Potato Famine.

Throughout the novel we question the concept of voice - who can be a voice for Ireland, for the famine? Does Dixon have the right to tell this story?

Ultimately this novel portrays the Irish Potato famine experience, the causes of why so many people suffered as much as they did, how it impacted people, and the lasting effect that the past can have on individuals.

The New York Times Book Review sums it up quite nicely in their review:
"But Star of the Sea is also an agonizing inquiry into the nature of abandonment and the difficulty of finding anyone who will truly care about the fate of others"

Non-Spoiler Overview                                                             
Spoiler Overview
Works Cited

Authors: Sarah Swenson, edited by Michaila Gerlach
Web Designers: Madison Luke and Andrew Olsen
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Version 38

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versionnumberov:versionnumber38
titledcterms:titleStar of the Sea Overview
descriptiondcterms:descriptionAndrew, Madison, Michaila, Ben,Sarah
contentsioc:content

Non-Spoiler Overview                                                             
Spoiler Overview
Works Cited


Star of the Sea was written by Joseph O’Connor and published in 2004.  It is a historical fiction novel that chronicles the voyage of a famine ship from Ireland to New York in 1847, which was the height of the potato famine.

In the bitter winter of 1847, from an Ireland torn by famine and injustice, the Star of the Sea sets sail for the New World.  On board are hundreds of refugees.  Among them are a maid with a devastating secret, the bankrupt Lord Merridith and his wife and children, and a killer who stalks the decks in search of vengeance.  This journey will see many lives end, while others begin anew.  In this spellbinding tale of tragedy and mercy, love and healing, the farther the ship sails towards the Promised Land, the more her passengers seem moored to a past that will never let them go. 

The story is given to us by American journalist G. Grantley Dixon, and is a journalistic murder mystery that is “newly revised with many inclusions” in the commemorative 100th edition.  Dixon includes excerpts from the captain’s log, interviews from people connected to the characters, and historical documents and letters.  

The “murder mystery” in the book is interesting because we know from the beginning that David Merridith is the person who gets murdered.  The mystery in the novel comes from questioning who murders him, why he is murdered, and what past events caused this to be his fate. 

Dixon breaks up telling the chronological voyage of the ship with chapters giving us insight into the characters’ pasts, explaining their stories.  We see the major events that happen in the characters’ lives and also see how all of these characters were affected by the Irish Potato Famine.

Throughout the novel we question the concept of voice - who can be a voice for Ireland, for the famine? Does Dixon have the right to tell this story?

Ultimately this novel portrays the Irish Potato famine experience, the causes of why so many people suffered as much as they did, how it impacted people, and the lasting effect that the past can have on individuals.

The New York Times Book Review sums it up quite nicely in their review:
"But Star of the Sea is also an agonizing inquiry into the nature of abandonment and the difficulty of finding anyone who will truly care about the fate of others"
default viewscalar:defaultViewplain
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createddcterms:created2016-03-04T12:47:53-08:00
typerdf:typehttp://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version

Version 37

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versionnumberov:versionnumber37
titledcterms:titleStar of the Sea Overview
descriptiondcterms:descriptionAndrew, Madison, Michaila, Ben,Sarah
contentsioc:content

Non-Spoiler Overview                                                             
Spoiler Overview
Works Cited


Star of the Sea was written by Joseph O’Connor and published in 2004.  It is a historical fiction novel that chronicles the voyage of a famine ship from Ireland to New York in 1847, which was the height of the potato famine.

In the bitter winter of 1847, from an Ireland torn by famine and injustice, the Star of the Sea sets sail for the New World.  On board are hundreds of refugees.  Among them are a maid with a devastating secret, the bankrupt Lord Merridith and his wife and children, and a killer who stalks the decks in search of vengeance.  This journey will see many lives end, while others begin anew.  In this spellbinding tale of tragedy and mercy, love and healing, the farther the ship sails towards the Promised Land, the more her passengers seem moored to a past that will never let them go. 

The story is given to us by American journalist G. Grantley Dixon, and is a journalistic murder mystery that is “newly revised with many inclusions” in the commemorative 100th edition.  Dixon includes excerpts from the captain’s log, interviews from people connected to the characters, and historical documents and letters.  

The “murder mystery” in the book is interesting because we know from the beginning that David Merridith is the person who gets murdered.  The mystery in the novel comes from questioning who murders him, why he is murdered, and what past events caused this to be his fate. 

Dixon breaks up telling the chronological voyage of the ship with chapters giving us insight into the characters’ pasts, explaining their stories.  We see the major events that happen in the characters’ lives and also see how all of these characters were affected by the Irish Potato Famine.

Throughout the novel we question the concept of voice - who can be a voice for Ireland, for the famine? Does Dixon have the right to tell this story?

Ultimately this novel portrays the Irish Potato famine experience, the causes of why so many people suffered as much as they did, how it impacted people, and the lasting effect that the past can have on individuals.

The New York Times Book Review sums it up quite nicely in their review:
"But Star of the Sea is also an agonizing inquiry into the nature of abandonment and the difficulty of finding anyone who will truly care about the fate of others"
default viewscalar:defaultViewplain
was attributed toprov:wasAttributedTohttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/users/9473
createddcterms:created2016-03-04T12:44:04-08:00
typerdf:typehttp://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version

Version 36

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versionnumberov:versionnumber36
titledcterms:titleStar of the Sea Overview
descriptiondcterms:descriptionAndrew, Madison, Michaila, Ben,Sarah
contentsioc:content

Non-Spoiler Overview                                                             
Spoiler Overview
Works Cited


Star of the Sea was written by Joseph O’Connor and published in 2004.  It is a historical fiction novel that chronicles the voyage of a famine ship from Ireland to New York in 1847, which was the height of the potato famine.

In the bitter winter of 1847, from an Ireland torn by famine and injustice, the Star of the Sea sets sail for the New World.  On board are hundreds of refugees.  Among them are a maid with a devastating secret, the bankrupt Lord Merridith and his wife and children, and a killer who stalks the decks in search of vengeance.  This journey will see many lives end, while others begin anew.  In this spellbinding tale of tragedy and mercy, love and healing, the farther the ship sails towards the Promised Land, the more her passengers seem moored to a past that will never let them go. 

The story is given to us by American journalist G. Grantley Dixon, and is a journalistic murder mystery that is “newly revised with many inclusions” in the commemorative 100th edition.  Dixon includes excerpts from the captain’s log, interviews from people connected to the characters, and historical documents and letters.  

The “murder mystery” in the book is interesting because we know from the beginning that David Merridith is the person who gets murdered.  The mystery in the novel comes from questioning who murders him, why he is murdered, and what past events caused this to be his fate. 

Dixon breaks up telling the chronological voyage of the ship with chapters giving us insight into the characters’ pasts, explaining their stories.  We see the major events that happen in the characters’ lives and also see how all of these characters were affected by the Irish Potato Famine.

Throughout the novel we question the concept of voice - who can be a voice for Ireland, for the famine? Does Dixon have the right to tell this story?

Ultimately this novel portrays the Irish Potato famine experience, the causes of why so many people suffered as much as they did, how it impacted people, and the lasting effect that the past can have on individuals.

The New York Times Book Review sums it up quite nicely in their review:
"But Star of the Sea is also an agonizing inquiry into the nature of abandonment and the difficulty of finding anyone who will truly care about the fate of others"
default viewscalar:defaultViewplain
was attributed toprov:wasAttributedTohttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/users/9473
createddcterms:created2016-03-04T12:41:46-08:00
typerdf:typehttp://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version

Version 35

resourcerdf:resourcehttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/the-star-of-the-sea-overview.35
versionnumberov:versionnumber35
titledcterms:titleStar of the Sea Overview
descriptiondcterms:descriptionAndrew, Madison, Michaila, Ben,Sarah
contentsioc:content

Non-Spoiler Overview                                                             
Spoiler Overview
Works Cited


Star of the Sea was written by Joseph O’Connor and published in 2004.  It is a historical fiction novel that chronicles the voyage of a famine ship from Ireland to New York in 1847, which was the height of the potato famine.

In the bitter winter of 1847, from an Ireland torn by famine and injustice, the Star of the Sea sets sail for the New World.  On board are hundreds of refugees.  Among them are a maid with a devastating secret, the bankrupt Lord Merridith and his wife and children, and a killer who stalks the decks in search of vengeance.  This journey will see many lives end, while others begin anew.  In this spellbinding tale of tragedy and mercy, love and healing, the farther the ship sails towards the Promised Land, the more her passengers seem moored to a past that will never let them go. 

The story is given to us by American journalist G. Grantley Dixon, and is a journalistic murder mystery that is “newly revised with many inclusions” in the commemorative 100th edition.  Dixon includes excerpts from the captain’s log, interviews from people connected to the characters, and historical documents and letters.  

The “murder mystery” in the book is interesting because we know from the beginning that David Merridith is the person who gets murdered.  The mystery in the novel comes from questioning who murders him, why he is murdered, and what past events caused this to be his fate. 

Dixon breaks up telling the chronological voyage of the ship with chapters giving us insight into the characters’ pasts, explaining their stories.  We see the major events that happen in the characters’ lives and also see how all of these characters were affected by the Irish Potato Famine.

Throughout the novel we question the concept of voice - who can be a voice for Ireland, for the famine? Does Dixon have the right to tell this story?

Ultimately this novel portrays the Irish Potato famine experience, the causes of why so many people suffered as much as they did, how it impacted people, and the lasting effect that the past can have on individuals.

The New York Times Book Review sums it up quite nicely in their review:
"But Star of the Sea is also an agonizing inquiry into the nature of abandonment and the difficulty of finding anyone who will truly care about the fate of others"
default viewscalar:defaultViewplain
was attributed toprov:wasAttributedTohttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/users/9473
createddcterms:created2016-03-04T12:41:26-08:00
typerdf:typehttp://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version

Version 34

resourcerdf:resourcehttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/the-star-of-the-sea-overview.34
versionnumberov:versionnumber34
titledcterms:titleStar of the Sea Overview
descriptiondcterms:descriptionAndrew, Madison, Michaila, Ben,Sarah
contentsioc:content

Non-Spoiler Overview                                                             
Spoiler Overview
Works Cited


Star of the Sea was written by Joseph O’Connor and published in 2004.  It is a historical fiction novel that chronicles the voyage of a famine ship from Ireland to New York in 1847, which was the height of the potato famine.

In the bitter winter of 1847, from an Ireland torn by famine and injustice, the Star of the Sea sets sail for the New World.  On board are hundreds of refugees.  Among them are a maid with a devastating secret, the bankrupt Lord Merridith and his wife and children, and a killer who stalks the decks in search of vengeance.  This journey will see many lives end, while others begin anew.  In this spellbinding tale of tragedy and mercy, love and healing, the farther the ship sails towards the Promised Land, the more her passengers seem moored to a past that will never let them go. 

The story is given to us by American journalist G. Grantley Dixon, and is a journalistic murder mystery that is “newly revised with many inclusions” in the commemorative 100th edition.  Dixon includes excerpts from the captain’s log, interviews from people connected to the characters, and historical documents and letters.  

The “murder mystery” in the book is interesting because we know from the beginning that David Merridith is the person who gets murdered.  The mystery in the novel comes from questioning who murders him, why he is murdered, and what past events caused this to be his fate. 

Dixon breaks up telling the chronological voyage of the ship with chapters giving us insight into the characters’ pasts, explaining their stories.  We see the major events that happen in the characters’ lives and also see how all of these characters were affected by the Irish Potato Famine.

Throughout the novel we question the concept of voice - who can be a voice for Ireland, for the famine? Does Dixon have the right to tell this story?

Ultimately this novel portrays the Irish Potato famine experience, the causes of why so many people suffered as much as they did, how it impacted people, and the lasting effect that the past can have on individuals.

The New York Times Book Review sums it up quite nicely in their review:
"But Star of the Sea is also an agonizing inquiry into the nature of abandonment and the difficulty of finding anyone who will truly care about the fate of others"
default viewscalar:defaultViewplain
was attributed toprov:wasAttributedTohttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/users/9473
createddcterms:created2016-03-04T12:39:19-08:00
typerdf:typehttp://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version

Version 33

resourcerdf:resourcehttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/the-star-of-the-sea-overview.33
versionnumberov:versionnumber33
titledcterms:titleStar of the Sea Overview
descriptiondcterms:descriptionAndrew, Madison, Michaila, Ben,Sarah
contentsioc:content

Non-Spoiler Overview                                                             
Spoiler Overview
Works Cited


Star of the Sea was written by Joseph O’Connor and published in 2004.  It is a historical fiction novel that chronicles the voyage of a famine ship from Ireland to New York in 1847, which was the height of the potato famine.

In the bitter winter of 1847, from an Ireland torn by famine and injustice, the Star of the Sea sets sail for the New World.  On board are hundreds of refugees.  Among them are a maid with a devastating secret, the bankrupt Lord Merridith and his wife and children, and a killer who stalks the decks in search of vengeance.  This journey will see many lives end, while others begin anew.  In this spellbinding tale of tragedy and mercy, love and healing, the farther the ship sails towards the Promised Land, the more her passengers seem moored to a past that will never let them go. 

The story is given to us by American journalist G. Grantley Dixon, and is a journalistic murder mystery that is “newly revised with many inclusions” in the commemorative 100th edition.  Dixon includes excerpts from the captain’s log, interviews from people connected to the characters, and historical documents and letters.  

The “murder mystery” in the book is interesting because we know from the beginning that David Merridith is the person who gets murdered.  The mystery in the novel comes from questioning who murders him, why he is murdered, and what past events caused this to be his fate. 

Dixon breaks up telling the chronological voyage of the ship with chapters giving us insight into the characters’ pasts, explaining their stories.  We see the major events that happen in the characters’ lives and also see how all of these characters were affected by the Irish Potato Famine.

Throughout the novel we question the concept of voice - who can be a voice for Ireland, for the famine? Does Dixon have the right to tell this story?

Ultimately this novel portrays the Irish Potato famine experience, the causes of why so many people suffered as much as they did, how it impacted people, and the lasting effect that the past can have on individuals.

The New York Times Book Review sums it up quite nicely in their review:
"But Star of the Sea is also an agonizing inquiry into the nature of abandonment and the difficulty of finding anyone who will truly care about the fate of others"

INSERT COVER IMAGE???
default viewscalar:defaultViewplain
was attributed toprov:wasAttributedTohttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/users/9473
createddcterms:created2016-03-04T12:38:47-08:00
typerdf:typehttp://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version

Version 32

resourcerdf:resourcehttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/the-star-of-the-sea-overview.32
versionnumberov:versionnumber32
titledcterms:titleStar of the Sea Overview
descriptiondcterms:descriptionAndrew, Madison, Michaila, Ben,Sarah
contentsioc:content

Non-Spoiler Overview                                                             
Spoiler Overview
Works Cited


Star of the Sea was written by Joseph O’Connor and published in 2004.  It is a historical fiction novel that chronicles the voyage of a famine ship from Ireland to New York in 1847, which was the height of the potato famine.

In the bitter winter of 1847, from an Ireland torn by famine and injustice, the Star of the Sea sets sail for the New World.  On board are hundreds of refugees.  Among them are a maid with a devastating secret, the bankrupt Lord Merridith and his wife and children, and a killer who stalks the decks in search of vengeance.  This journey will see many lives end, while others begin anew.  In this spellbinding tale of tragedy and mercy, love and healing, the farther the ship sails towards the Promised Land, the more her passengers seem moored to a past that will never let them go. 

The story is given to us by American journalist G. Grantley Dixon, and is a journalistic murder mystery that is “newly revised with many inclusions” in the commemorative 100th edition.  Dixon includes excerpts from the captain’s log, interviews from people connected to the characters, and historical documents and letters.  

The “murder mystery” in the book is interesting because we know from the beginning that David Merridith is the person who gets murdered.  The mystery in the novel comes from questioning who murders him, why he is murdered, and what past events caused this to be his fate. 

Dixon breaks up telling the chronological voyage of the ship with chapters giving us insight into the characters’ pasts, explaining their stories.  We see the major events that happen in the characters’ lives and also see how all of these characters were affected by the Irish Potato Famine.

Throughout the novel we question the concept of voice - who can be a voice for Ireland, for the famine? Does Dixon have the right to tell this story?

Ultimately this novel portrays the Irish Potato famine experience, the causes of why so many people suffered as much as they did, how it impacted people, and the lasting effect that the past can have on individuals.

The New York Times Book Review sums it up quite nicely in their review:
"But Star of the Sea is also an agonizing inquiry into the nature of abandonment and the difficulty of finding anyone who will truly care about the fate of others"

INSERT COVER IMAGE???
default viewscalar:defaultViewplain
was attributed toprov:wasAttributedTohttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/users/9473
createddcterms:created2016-03-04T12:35:33-08:00
typerdf:typehttp://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version

Version 31

resourcerdf:resourcehttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/the-star-of-the-sea-overview.31
versionnumberov:versionnumber31
titledcterms:titleThe Star of the Sea Overview
descriptiondcterms:descriptionAndrew, Madison, Michaila, Ben,Sarah
contentsioc:content

Non-Spoiler Overview                                                             
Spoiler Overview
Works Cited


Star of the Sea was written by Joseph O’Connor and published in 2004.  It is a historical fiction novel that chronicles the voyage of a famine ship from Ireland to New York in 1847, which was the height of the potato famine.

In the bitter winter of 1847, from an Ireland torn by famine and injustice, the Star of the Sea sets sail for the New World.  On board are hundreds of refugees.  Among them are a maid with a devastating secret, the bankrupt Lord Merridith and his wife and children, and a killer who stalks the decks in search of vengeance.  This journey will see many lives end, while others begin anew.  In this spellbinding tale of tragedy and mercy, love and healing, the farther the ship sails towards the Promised Land, the more her passengers seem moored to a past that will never let them go. 

The story is given to us by American journalist G. Grantley Dixon, and is a journalistic murder mystery that is “newly revised with many inclusions” in the commemorative 100th edition.  Dixon includes excerpts from the captain’s log, interviews from people connected to the characters, and historical documents and letters.  

The “murder mystery” in the book is interesting because we know from the beginning that David Merridith is the person who gets murdered.  The mystery in the novel comes from questioning who murders him, why he is murdered, and what past events caused this to be his fate. 

Dixon breaks up telling the chronological voyage of the ship with chapters giving us insight into the characters’ pasts, explaining their stories.  We see the major events that happen in the characters’ lives and also see how all of these characters were affected by the Irish Potato Famine.

Throughout the novel we question the concept of voice - who can be a voice for Ireland, for the famine? Does Dixon have the right to tell this story?

Ultimately this novel portrays the Irish Potato famine experience, the causes of why so many people suffered as much as they did, how it impacted people, and the lasting effect that the past can have on individuals.

The New York Times Book Review sums it up quite nicely in their review:
"But Star of the Sea is also an agonizing inquiry into the nature of abandonment and the difficulty of finding anyone who will truly care about the fate of others"

INSERT COVER IMAGE???
default viewscalar:defaultViewplain
was attributed toprov:wasAttributedTohttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/users/9473
createddcterms:created2016-03-04T12:35:10-08:00
typerdf:typehttp://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version

Version 30

resourcerdf:resourcehttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/the-star-of-the-sea-overview.30
versionnumberov:versionnumber30
titledcterms:titleThe Star of the Sea Overview
descriptiondcterms:descriptionAndrew, Madison, Michaila, Ben,Sarah
contentsioc:content

Non-Spoiler Overview                                                             
Spoiler Overview

Works Cited


Star of the Sea was written by Joseph O’Connor and published in 2004.  It is a historical fiction novel that chronicles the voyage of a famine ship from Ireland to New York in 1847, which was the height of the potato famine.

In the bitter winter of 1847, from an Ireland torn by famine and injustice, the Star of the Sea sets sail for the New World.  On board are hundreds of refugees.  Among them are a maid with a devastating secret, the bankrupt Lord Merridith and his wife and children, and a killer who stalks the decks in search of vengeance.  This journey will see many lives end, while others begin anew.  In this spellbinding tale of tragedy and mercy, love and healing, the farther the ship sails towards the Promised Land, the more her passengers seem moored to a past that will never let them go. 

The story is given to us by American journalist G. Grantley Dixon, and is a journalistic murder mystery that is “newly revised with many inclusions” in the commemorative 100th edition.  Dixon includes excerpts from the captain’s log, interviews from people connected to the characters, and historical documents and letters.  

The “murder mystery” in the book is interesting because we know from the beginning that David Merridith is the person who gets murdered.  The mystery in the novel comes from questioning who murders him, why he is murdered, and what past events caused this to be his fate. 

Dixon breaks up telling the chronological voyage of the ship with chapters giving us insight into the characters’ pasts, explaining their stories.  We see the major events that happen in the characters’ lives and also see how all of these characters were affected by the Irish Potato Famine.

Throughout the novel we question the concept of voice - who can be a voice for Ireland, for the famine? Does Dixon have the right to tell this story?

Ultimately this novel portrays the Irish Potato famine experience, the causes of why so many people suffered as much as they did, how it impacted people, and the lasting effect that the past can have on individuals.

The New York Times Book Review sums it up quite nicely in their review:
"But Star of the Sea is also an agonizing inquiry into the nature of abandonment and the difficulty of finding anyone who will truly care about the fate of others"

INSERT COVER IMAGE???
default viewscalar:defaultViewplain
was attributed toprov:wasAttributedTohttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/users/9473
createddcterms:created2016-03-04T12:34:50-08:00
typerdf:typehttp://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version

Version 29

resourcerdf:resourcehttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/the-star-of-the-sea-overview.29
versionnumberov:versionnumber29
titledcterms:titleThe Star of the Sea Overview
descriptiondcterms:descriptionAndrew, Madison, Michaila, Ben,Sarah
contentsioc:content

Non-Spoiler Overview                                                             
Spoiler Overview

Star of the Sea was written by Joseph O’Connor and published in 2004.  It is a historical fiction novel that chronicles the voyage of a famine ship from Ireland to New York in 1847, which was the height of the potato famine.

In the bitter winter of 1847, from an Ireland torn by famine and injustice, the Star of the Sea sets sail for the New World.  On board are hundreds of refugees.  Among them are a maid with a devastating secret, the bankrupt Lord Merridith and his wife and children, and a killer who stalks the decks in search of vengeance.  This journey will see many lives end, while others begin anew.  In this spellbinding tale of tragedy and mercy, love and healing, the farther the ship sails towards the Promised Land, the more her passengers seem moored to a past that will never let them go. 

The story is given to us by American journalist G. Grantley Dixon, and is a journalistic murder mystery that is “newly revised with many inclusions” in the commemorative 100th edition.  Dixon includes excerpts from the captain’s log, interviews from people connected to the characters, and historical documents and letters.  

The “murder mystery” in the book is interesting because we know from the beginning that David Merridith is the person who gets murdered.  The mystery in the novel comes from questioning who murders him, why he is murdered, and what past events caused this to be his fate. 

Dixon breaks up telling the chronological voyage of the ship with chapters giving us insight into the characters’ pasts, explaining their stories.  We see the major events that happen in the characters’ lives and also see how all of these characters were affected by the Irish Potato Famine.

Throughout the novel we question the concept of voice - who can be a voice for Ireland, for the famine? Does Dixon have the right to tell this story?

Ultimately this novel portrays the Irish Potato famine experience, the causes of why so many people suffered as much as they did, how it impacted people, and the lasting effect that the past can have on individuals.

The New York Times Book Review sums it up quite nicely in their review:
"But Star of the Sea is also an agonizing inquiry into the nature of abandonment and the difficulty of finding anyone who will truly care about the fate of others"

INSERT COVER IMAGE???
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Version 28

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versionnumberov:versionnumber28
titledcterms:titleThe Star of the Sea Overview
descriptiondcterms:descriptionAndrew, Madison, Michaila, Ben,Sarah
contentsioc:content

Non-Spoiler Overview                                                              


Spoiler Overview




Star of the Sea was written by Joseph O’Connor and published in 2004.  It is a historical fiction novel that chronicles the voyage of a famine ship from Ireland to New York in 1847, which was the height of the potato famine.

In the bitter winter of 1847, from an Ireland torn by famine and injustice, the Star of the Sea sets sail for the New World.  On board are hundreds of refugees.  Among them are a maid with a devastating secret, the bankrupt Lord Merridith and his wife and children, and a killer who stalks the decks in search of vengeance.  This journey will see many lives end, while others begin anew.  In this spellbinding tale of tragedy and mercy, love and healing, the farther the ship sails towards the Promised Land, the more her passengers seem moored to a past that will never let them go. 

The story is given to us by American journalist G. Grantley Dixon, and is a journalistic murder mystery that is “newly revised with many inclusions” in the commemorative 100th edition.  Dixon includes excerpts from the captain’s log, interviews from people connected to the characters, and historical documents and letters.  

The “murder mystery” in the book is interesting because we know from the beginning that David Merridith is the person who gets murdered.  The mystery in the novel comes from questioning who murders him, why he is murdered, and what past events caused this to be his fate. 

Dixon breaks up telling the chronological voyage of the ship with chapters giving us insight into the characters’ pasts, explaining their stories.  We see the major events that happen in the characters’ lives and also see how all of these characters were affected by the Irish Potato Famine.

Throughout the novel we question the concept of voice - who can be a voice for Ireland, for the famine? Does Dixon have the right to tell this story?

Ultimately this novel portrays the Irish Potato famine experience, the causes of why so many people suffered as much as they did, how it impacted people, and the lasting effect that the past can have on individuals.

The New York Times Book Review sums it up quite nicely in their review:
"But Star of the Sea is also an agonizing inquiry into the nature of abandonment and the difficulty of finding anyone who will truly care about the fate of others"

INSERT COVER IMAGE???
default viewscalar:defaultViewplain
was attributed toprov:wasAttributedTohttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/users/9490
createddcterms:created2016-03-02T13:39:52-08:00
typerdf:typehttp://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version

Version 27

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versionnumberov:versionnumber27
titledcterms:titleThe Star of the Sea Overview
descriptiondcterms:descriptionAndrew, Madison, Michaila, Ben,Sarah
contentsioc:content

Non-Spoiler Overview                                                              


Spoiler Overview




Star of the Sea was written by Joseph O’Connor and published in 2004.  It is a historical fiction novel that chronicles the voyage of a famine ship from Ireland to New York in 1847, which was the height of the potato famine.

In the bitter winter of 1847, from an Ireland torn by famine and injustice, the Star of the Sea sets sail for the New World.  On board are hundreds of refugees.  Among them are a maid with a devastating secret, the bankrupt Lord Merridith and his wife and children, and a killer who stalks the decks in search of vengeance.  This journey will see many lives end, while others begin anew.  In this spellbinding tale of tragedy and mercy, love and healing, the farther the ship sails towards the Promised Land, the more her passengers seem moored to a past that will never let them go. 

The story is given to us by American journalist G. Grantley Dixon, and is a journalistic murder mystery that is “newly revised with many inclusions” in the commemorative 100th edition.  Dixon includes excerpts from the captain’s log, interviews from people connected to the characters, and historical documents and letters.  
The “murder mystery” in the book is interesting because we know from the beginning that David Merridith is the person who gets murdered.  The mystery in the novel comes from questioning who murders him, why he is murdered, and what past events caused this to be his fate. 
Dixon breaks up telling the chronological voyage of the ship with chapters giving us insight into the characters’ pasts, explaining their stories.  We see the major events that happen in the characters’ lives and also see how all of these characters were affected by the Irish Potato Famine.
Throughout the novel we question the concept of voice - who can be a voice for Ireland, for the famine? Does Dixon have the right to tell this story?
Ultimately this novel portrays the Irish Potato famine experience, the causes of why so many people suffered as much as they did, how it impacted people, and the lasting effect that the past can have on individuals.

The New York Times Book Review sums it up quite nicely in their review:
"But Star of the Sea is also an agonizing inquiry into the nature of abandonment and the difficulty of finding anyone who will truly care about the fate of others"

INSERT COVER IMAGE???
default viewscalar:defaultViewplain
was attributed toprov:wasAttributedTohttps://scalar.usc.edu/works/star-of-the-sea-a-postcolonialpostmodern-voyage-into-the-irish-famine/users/9829
createddcterms:created2016-03-02T13:38:54-08:00
typerdf:typehttp://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version

Version 26

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versionnumberov:versionnumber26
titledcterms:titleThe Star of the Sea Overview
descriptiondcterms:descriptionAndrew, Madison, Michaila, Ben,Sarah
contentsioc:content

Star of the Sea was written by Joseph O’Connor and published in 2004.  It is a historical fiction novel that chronicles the voyage of a famine ship from Ireland to New York in 1847, which was the height of the potato famine.

In the bitter winter of 1847, from an Ireland torn by famine and injustice, the Star of the Sea sets sail for the New World.  On board are hundreds of refugees.  Among them are a maid with a devastating secret, the bankrupt Lord Merridith and his wife and children, and a killer who stalks the decks in search of vengeance.  This journey will see many lives end, while others begin anew.  In this spellbinding tale of tragedy and mercy, love and healing, the farther the ship sails towards the Promised Land, the more her passengers seem moored to a past that will never let them go. 

The story is given to us by American journalist G. Grantley Dixon, and is a journalistic murder mystery that is “newly revised with many inclusions” in the commemorative 100th edition.  Dixon includes excerpts from the captain’s log, interviews from people connected to the characters, and historical documents and letters.  

The “murder mystery” in the book is interesting because we know from the beginning that David Merridith is the person who gets murdered.  The mystery in the novel comes from questioning who murders him, why he is murdered, and what past events caused this to be his fate. 

Dixon breaks up telling the chronological voyage of the ship with chapters giving us insight into the characters’ pasts, explaining their stories.  We see the major events that happen in the characters’ lives and also see how all of these characters were affected by the Irish Potato Famine.

Throughout the novel we question the concept of voice - who can be a voice for Ireland, for the famine? Does Dixon have the right to tell this story?

Ultimately this novel portrays the Irish Potato famine experience, the causes of why so many people suffered as much as they did, how it impacted people, and the lasting effect that the past can have on individuals.

The New York Times Book Review sums it up quite nicely in their review:
"But Star of the Sea is also an agonizing inquiry into the nature of abandonment and the difficulty of finding anyone who will truly care about the fate of others"

INSERT COVER IMAGE???


Non-Spoiler Overview
                                                              


Spoiler Overview



 
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Version 25

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contentsioc:content

Non-Spoiler Overview                                                              


Spoiler Overview



 
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Version 24

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versionnumberov:versionnumber24
titledcterms:titleThe Star of the Sea Overview
descriptiondcterms:descriptionAndrew, Madison, Michaila, Ben,Sarah
contentsioc:content

Star of the Sea was written by Joseph O’Connor and published in 2004.  It is a historical fiction novel that chronicles the voyage of a famine ship from Ireland to New York in 1847, which was the height of the potato famine.

In the bitter winter of 1847, from an Ireland torn by famine and injustice, the Star of the Sea sets sail for the New World.  On board are hundreds of refugees.  Among them are a maid with a devastating secret, the bankrupt Lord Merridith and his wife and children, and a killer who stalks the decks in search of vengeance.  This journey will see many lives end, while others begin anew.  In this spellbinding tale of tragedy and mercy, love and healing, the farther the ship sails towards the Promised Land, the more her passengers seem moored to a past that will never let them go. 

The story is given to us by American journalist G. Grantley Dixon, and is a journalistic murder mystery that is “newly revised with many inclusions” in the commemorative 100th edition.  Dixon includes excerpts from the captain’s log, interviews from people connected to the characters, and historical documents and letters.  
The “murder mystery” in the book is interesting because we know from the beginning that David Merridith is the person who gets murdered.  The mystery in the novel comes from questioning who murders him, why he is murdered, and what past events caused this to be his fate. 
Dixon breaks up telling the chronological voyage of the ship with chapters giving us insight into the characters’ pasts, explaining their stories.  We see the major events that happen in the characters’ lives and also see how all of these characters were affected by the Irish Potato Famine.
Throughout the novel we question the concept of voice - who can be a voice for Ireland, for the famine? Does Dixon have the right to tell this story?
Ultimately this novel portrays the Irish Potato famine experience, the causes of why so many people suffered as much as they did, how it impacted people, and the lasting effect that the past can have on individuals.

The New York Times Book Review sums it up quite nicely in their review:
"But Star of the Sea is also an agonizing inquiry into the nature of abandonment and the difficulty of finding anyone who will truly care about the fate of others"

INSERT COVER IMAGE???


Non-Spoiler Overview
                                                              


Spoiler Overview



 
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Version 23

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versionnumberov:versionnumber23
titledcterms:titleThe Star of the Sea Overview
descriptiondcterms:descriptionAndrew, Madison, Michaila, Ben,Sarah
contentsioc:content

Star of the Sea was written by Joseph O’Connor and published in 2004.  It is a historical fiction novel that chronicles the voyage of a famine ship from Ireland to New York in 1847, which was the height of the potato famine.

In the bitter winter of 1847, from an Ireland torn by famine and injustice, the Star of the Sea sets sail for the New World.  On board are hundreds of refugees.  Among them are a maid with a devastating secret, the bankrupt Lord Merridith and his wife and children, and a killer who stalks the decks in search of vengeance.  This journey will see many lives end, while others begin anew.  In this spellbinding tale of tragedy and mercy, love and healing, the farther the ship sails towards the Promised Land, the more her passengers seem moored to a past that will never let them go. 

The story is given to us by American journalist G. Grantley Dixon, and is a journalistic murder mystery that is “newly revised with many inclusions” in the commemorative 100th edition.  Dixon includes excerpts from the captain’s log, interviews from people connected to the characters, and historical documents and letters.  
The “murder mystery” in the book is interesting because we know from the beginning that David Merridith is the person who gets murdered.  The mystery in the novel comes from questioning who murders him, why he is murdered, and what past events caused this to be his fate. 
Dixon breaks up telling the chronological voyage of the ship with chapters giving us insight into the characters’ pasts, explaining their stories.  We see the major events that happen in the characters’ lives and also see how all of these characters were affected by the Irish Potato Famine.
Throughout the novel we question the concept of voice - who can be a voice for Ireland, for the famine? Does Dixon have the right to tell this story?
Ultimately this novel portrays the Irish Potato famine experience, the causes of why so many people suffered as much as they did, how it impacted people, and the lasting effect that the past can have on individuals.

The New York Times Book Review sums it up quite nicely in their review:
"But Star of the Sea is also an agonizing inquiry into the nature of abandonment and the difficulty of finding anyone who will truly care about the fate of others"

INSERT COVER IMAGE???

Non-Spoiler Overview
                                                              


Spoiler Overview



 
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Version 22

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versionnumberov:versionnumber22
titledcterms:titleThe Star of the Sea Overview
descriptiondcterms:descriptionAndrew, Madison, Michaila, Ben,Sarah
contentsioc:content

Star of the Sea was written by Joseph O’Connor and published in 2004.  It is a historical fiction novel that chronicles the voyage of a famine ship from Ireland to New York in 1847, which was the height of the potato famine.

In the bitter winter of 1847, from an Ireland torn by famine and injustice, the Star of the Sea sets sail for the New World.  On board are hundreds of refugees.  Among them are a maid with a devastating secret, the bankrupt Lord Merridith and his wife and children, and a killer who stalks the decks in search of vengeance.  This journey will see many lives end, while others begin anew.  In this spellbinding tale of tragedy and mercy, love and healing, the farther the ship sails towards the Promised Land, the more her passengers seem moored to a past that will never let them go. 

The story is given to us by American journalist G. Grantley Dixon, and is a journalistic murder mystery that is “newly revised with many inclusions” in the commemorative 100th edition.  Dixon includes excerpts from the captain’s log, interviews from people connected to the characters, and historical documents and letters.  
The “murder mystery” in the book is interesting because we know from the beginning that David Merridith is the person who gets murdered.  The mystery in the novel comes from questioning who murders him, why he is murdered, and what past events caused this to be his fate. 
Dixon breaks up telling the chronological voyage of the ship with chapters giving us insight into the characters’ pasts, explaining their stories.  We see the major events that happen in the characters’ lives and also see how all of these characters were affected by the Irish Potato Famine.
Throughout the novel we question the concept of voice - who can be a voice for Ireland, for the famine? Does Dixon have the right to tell this story?
Ultimately this novel portrays the Irish Potato famine experience, the causes of why so many people suffered as much as they did, how it impacted people, and the lasting effect that the past can have on individuals.

The New York Times Book Review sums it up quite nicely in their review:
"But Star of the Sea is also an agonizing inquiry into the nature of abandonment and the difficulty of finding anyone who will truly care about the fate of others"

INSERT COVER IMAGE???

Non-Spoiler Overview
                                                              


Spoiler Overview



 
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Version 21

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Non-Spoiler Overview                                                              


Spoiler Overview



 
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Non-Spoiler Overview                                                              


Spoiler Overview



 
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Non-Spoiler Overview                                                              


Spoiler Overview

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Non-Spoiler Overview                                                                 Spoiler Overview

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Non-Spoiler Overview                                                                 Spoiler Overview

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Non-Spoiler Overview                                                                              Spoiler Overview

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