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A Kick Against The Pricks: The Autobiography [Hardcover]

David Norris
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
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Book Description

11 Oct 2012

David Norris is one of Ireland's most popular, colourful and charismatic public figures. Not a man to shy away from controversy, he has spent most of his adult life challenging the establishment, whether as a leading campaigner for gay rights, a passionate conservationist, an unconventional academic and Joycean scholar, a brilliant raconteur, or, since 1987, a fiercely independent Senator and outspoken defender of human rights.

Born in the Belgian Congo to an English father, who died when he was six years old, and an Irish mother, who died when he was twenty-one, David has been a Dubliner all his life, and the city of Ulysses remains one of his great passions. He spear-headed the revival of Georgian Dublin, particularly through his campaign to save North Great George's Street, where he has lived for the last thirty-five years.

But it is David Norris's campaign to decriminalize homosexuality that will stand as his major legacy. Over a long sixteen years, he fought a difficult battle to overturn the Victorian law, finally winning a historic victory in the European Court of Human Rights in 1988.

David's decision to run for President of Ireland in 2011 was not lightly taken, but it proved to be the most bruising period of his life. His popularity and the public affection in which he is held saw him quickly established as the front-runner. However, a sustained and hostile media campaign forced him out of the race; although he re-entered it in the autumn, the momentum had been lost. In these pages, David Norris reveals for the first time the full, no-holds-barred story of his presidential campaign, and of how he recovered from the turmoil.

A Kick Against the Pricks is a brilliant, deeply revealing autobiography, a remarkable journey from the margins to the centre of Irish society.


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Product details

  • Hardcover: 416 pages
  • Publisher: Transworld Ireland (11 Oct 2012)
  • Language: Unknown
  • ISBN-10: 1848271344
  • ISBN-13: 978-1848271340
  • Product Dimensions: 16.2 x 3.8 x 24 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 125,967 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Review

Norris emerges in these pages as a figure who feels a passionate engagement with the world and is in possession of great moral seriousness. He is also very funny. . A Kick Against the Pricks is more than the account of an interesting life well lived. . He wishes to speak up for the idea of a life led by conscience, a life that made a difference to the world. . His autobiography is .a way of suggesting and evoking what a lone voice can do by remaining fearless and dutiful, by speaking up again and again, by learning to fail better, by losing neither a sense of humour nor a sense of purpose nor the skill, displayed with relish in this book, of taking real pleasure from life. (Colm Toibin The Irish Times )

Norris has added immeasurably to our public life. . Norris's memoir is excellent . He gives us a complete picture, in a fluent and highly readable account. . raises important questions, such as the power of the media . The good senator is redeemed by his bravery and wit. (Eamonn Delaney Irish Independent )

Much like the man himself, it's a witty, erudite, entertaining and provocative read. (Olaf Tyransen Hot Press )

Book Description

The revealing and colourful autobiography of one of Ireland's most controversial public figures.

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Customer Reviews

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4.7 out of 5 stars
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
1 of 2 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Verified Purchase
This is an absolutely bloody marvellous read! I bought this only to support the author but haven't had such a good laugh in ages. Even if you don't know Dublin, its social circles or machinations, you'll still appraciate the humopuir of the intellect of, and the sitaations experienced by the the author.
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars An Excellent Biography from a Great Man 5 Dec 2012
Format:Hardcover
Senator David Norris, independent member of Seanad Éireann, presidential candidate, Joycean scholar and defender of human rights. This is the David Norris that we know, his public roles, but there is a lot more to the man and what made him and even those who think they know a lot more about him will find information of great interest in this book. The epigraphs explain the title. From The Bible, Act 26:4, 'Saul, why persecutest thou me? It is hard for thee to kick against pricks', from Euripedes' The Bacchae, 'Being enraged I would kick against the pricks' and Plautus, 'If you strike against the pricks with your fists you hurt your hands more than the pricks.' Followed by the meaning of the word, 'Prick - a kind of sharpened goad used to prod oxen...from ancient times a source of metaphor...' and used by David Norris 'in full consciousness of its double entendre as a metaphor' for his 'lifelong struggle against the establishment.'
The chapter titles are literary and joyful in themselves; 'My Family and Other Animals', 'Borstal Boy' and 'The Only Gay in the Village' being just three examples. The humorous 'Warning to Readers' to consume the material whole as 'unauthorised toxic bundles of selected quotations may appear in the media' (should steer you away from this review!!) gives us an early insight into David Norris's sense of humour, with a warning to 'be especially cautious of sensational headlines'. Before starting in to this book, I will say that the photographs are fabulous and tell a story all on their own. From the earliest photos of his maternal grandparents in Co.Laois and his uncle Dick, a colonel and chaplain to the Royal family seen with the young Queen Elizabeth and also Queen Mary, through so many life events to a final most majestic portrait of David Norris at his home in North Great Georges Street.
For David Norris, this book, as he states in the prologue, is an apologia in the classical sense, an explanation to be considered by the civilised reader. With a comment on his Christmas post-presidential campaign and the gutter press of Rupert Murdoch, he realised there was always resurrection. Born to older parents (father forty-nine and mother forty-three) after ten childless years of marriage, his brother John then four years later David. Having lived and worked in the Congo as Chief Engineer for Lever Brothers a return to Dublin was decided on; first his mother and the two small boys alone, in early 1945 during the war as his father still worked abroad. He saw his father just three more times in the next four years for four- or six-week breaks as he died in Africa of a coronary at fifty-six.
With little family for the majority of his life, he says 'I've always loved the idea of a family, and throughout my life have always tried to assemble the elements of it.' With reminiscences of school there are the agonies of homesickness of an eight-year-old boarder in a male version of St Trinian's with an absent-minded eccentric headmaster and teachers keen with the cane. Traumatised, he often ran away.
His life is one of the fullest I have come across and he seems to have met every dignitary going. The campaigning that he is well known for is covered with interesting stories. With a closing chapter entitled 'Laughter and Love of Friends', amongst his contemplations on belief, mortality and health, he recalls an emergency hospital visit where halfway to the ambulance he returned for an armful of books. Amongst the crowd gathered a lad called, 'Fair play to ya, Norris, ye're the only man in Dublin who'd be at death's door and he'd be going back for his bukes!' Concluding that he has had a marvelous life and that like Edith Piaf he regrets nothing, he offers some obituary notes and tombstone engavings. All are worthy, but I would plump for the quote from your man above.
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars An excellent book from start to finish. 2 Dec 2012
Format:Hardcover
David Norris has finally written his life story and it is a remarkable book from start to finish.
A Joycean scholar, human rights activist, senator and just last year one of the selected nominees
to run for the Irish presidency, he writes candidly and honestly about every aspect of his life. 'A Kick Against The Pricks' is a triumph as a beautifully written personal memoir as well as being the definitive truth behind the many lies printed about him by the gutter press.
Once I started reading this book I could not put it down, I would highly recommend it!
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