'...it is this sense of singularity that Tom Maguire outlines so very well in his excellent and timely book...' 'This book gives a sense of the lived experience of the troubles as depicted in a very broad range of dramatic productions where the effects of political strife are performed by characters.' 'Tom Maguire, in short, is a class act!' (The Irish Book Review, Vol. 2, No. 3 Spring 2007) 'To read Tom Maguire's illuminating, ground breaking study Making Theatre in Northern Ireland, you begin to understand to what degree Northern Ireland's writers have been hemmed in and corralled by the Troubles' '...this is a nuanced, resonant study that contains within it enough grounds to meet the very challenges I have tried to put to it; a measure of its calibre is the complexity with which you find yourself arguing back. It brings the discussion of theatre in Northern Ireland to a new level and will prove indispensable for practitioners, students and the public from now on.' (Irish Theatre Magazine, Vol. 7, No. 32, Autumn 2007) 'Making Theatre in Northern Ireland is a welcome contribution to the limited literature on theater in Northern Ireland...' (Comparative Drama, Volume 41, No. 3, P. 379, Fall 2007) '...it is a delight to read Tom Maguire's outstanding new book on theatre and Northern Ireland.' 'What results, then, is a book that will be essential reading for scholars of Irish theatre. Crucially, it also offers much to academics working on drama from other societies in conflict. Thus, Maguire has much to contribute to debates on post-devolution Britain.' '...it is an important book that will have wide application and value.' (New Theatre Quarterly, Volume 24, No. 1, February 2008) '... Tom Maguire's fascinating book...' (Theatre Research International, Volume 33, No. 1) '...an analysis of theatre in Northern Ireland that takes place within specific cultural and political theoretical contexts , and which starts from an understanding of the complexity of identity in the North. I also think Maguire's work here represents a refreshing challenge to existing and, in my opinion, largely outdated understandings of what it can mean to be a nationalist (or unionist) today in the context of Northern Ireland, and he achieves this challenge primarily through the lens of culture rather than politics, while making clear throughout that the two are always linked.' '...this is significant and very welcome contribution to the field of Irish theatre criticism. It is beautifully produced and edited, and is written with a clarity often missing from contemporary studies...' (Performance Paradigm 3, May 2007)