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What does Cal teach us about the difficulties in N.Ireland?


            The book I have chosen to study in this piece is Cal. It is a novel set in 1980's Ireland, and is mainly about the troubles between the Protestants and Catholics at that time. In my opinion, the novel itself is three different types of book all merged into one. As well as being part love story part thriller, it also carries a moral meaning as well. Northern Ireland's troubles as a whole are also talked about, alongside it's connection to Britain and the way both the Catholics and the Protestants view their situation. The actual text itself is about a Catholic boy, Cal, growing up in a Protestant neighbourhood, which obviously causes troubles throughout the book, mainly because he and his father are the only Catholic family left in that area. .
             He gets involved in the I.R.A. and does a couple of petty jobs for them, until one evening he becomes the getaway driver for an assassination. This haunts him throughout the book, partly because he wants to get out of the I.R.A. and partly because he falls in love with the dead man's wife, Marcella Morton. The book is very complex, with a lot of feelings and issues being exposed which is what I think in part makes the book so interesting to read.
             Throughout the book, there is a lot of very obvious social conflict on the estate that Cal lives in. One of the main aspects of this is the religious bigotry. Even simple little things, like the union jack flags being kept up long past the twelfth of July, and the kerbstones painted in alternating red, white, and blue are noted by Cal as he walks down the street as a sign of growing anger that he and his father have not left the estate. However his father, Shamie, is a very stubborn man, and refuses to leave his house.
             "No loyalist bastard is going to force me out of my own home. They can kill me first.".
             But it wasn't a single bastard that worried Cal, it was an accumulation of them.
             This teaches us that in Northern Ireland, the war isn't all physical.


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