Máiréad Ní Ghráda (23 December 1896–13 June 1971, age 74), was an Irish poet, playwright, and broadcaster born in Kilmaley, Co. Clare.
Ní Ghráda's father James O'Grady was a farmer, local county councilor and a native speaker of Irish and it is thought it was from him Máiréad got her love for the Irish language.
Ní Ghráda was jailed in 1921 for selling republican flags, and later she became the secretary to the Cumann na nGaedhael TD Ernest Blythe
Ní Ghráda was a children's program compiler on the 1926 radio station 2RN which later became Radio Éireann later becoming the stations principal announcer in 1929, holding that position until 1935 when she became a part-time announcer.
During this period Ní Ghráda began to write radio and stage productions, her play Micheál even won an Abbey Theatre award in 1933.
I'm not sure when I will get to this one, but after a trip to Ireland it has certainly moved up the amorphous to-read queue. While in Ireland, I bought several books in Irish, including a Roddy Doyle and Harry Potter in Irish.
Great beginner book to start you on the path. It covers a lot and has practice lessons for every chapter. If you have taken the language before and need a refresher it is also a nice place to fall back to. The answer key can be found online with a simple search which is great to use after you do a lesson to check yourself. This is the foundation book we used for the first two years in my adult Irish Language class. Is maith liom é agus tá súil agam gur mhaith leat é freisin!
This is going to take time.. Going to look for another book/work study that comes with audio to help with pronunciation. For what this book is worth, it did help some so I can't rate it low.. It's just I need a little more than what this offers.