Liam Lynch joined the Irish Volunteers after the Easter Rising of 1916
and quickly rose through its ranks. He reorganised the Cork Brigade in
1919 and in 1921 became the commanding officer of the First Southern
Division which controlled all the Volunteer Brigades in the south of the
country. A prominent opponent of the Treaty of 1921, he became chief of
staff of the anti-Treaty IRA, leading the fight against the pro-Treaty
forces until his death in 1923. With the aid of Liam Lynch's personal
letters, private documents and historical records, 'Liam Lynch: The Real
Chief' traces the turbulent career of one of Ireland's greatest
guerrilla commanders from his birth in 1893 until his death twenty-nine
years later in the Civil War when he was killed in action on the
Knockmealdown mountains. This book demonstrates Liam Lynch's importance
in Irish history, including his efforts with Michael Collins, Richard
Mulcahy and others to avoid a civil war, and his unwavering efforts to
achieve a thirty-two county republic, rather than a partitioned state.
Part of the 'Irish Revolutionaries' series being published in the run-up
to the centenary of the 1916 Rising.