"The Imperial Irish brings together the accumulated results and insights of a generation of research into the history of the Irish Roman Catholic Church in Canada and its contribution to Canadian Great War national and ecclesiastical history. The chapters are tightly focused and make effective use of the personal experiences of many Irish Catholic Canadians. What most strikes me in the style is the ease with which the larger picture of institutions and issues flows back and forth into the lives of these people. This is mature scholarship – it is all of one fabric, one narrative, moving from personal to public and back. Mark McGowan has lived with these sources and also with these people for a long time." Duff Crerar, Grand Prairie Regional College, and author of Padre's in No Man's Land "McGowan's sophisticated handling of primary sources, and wide-ranging but nuanced conclusions, makes this work a gold standard for any future works on religion and the Great War." Canadian Journal of Irish Studies "Mark McGowan's deep research into personal stories, newspapers, and multiple archives draws out the complex interplay of identity and loyalty during the war, observing how Irish Catholics justified service to the Crown. McGowan's work provides new insight into the crisis around forcing young men to fight against their will, and Irish Catholics distanced themselves from those in French-speaking Canada. This is a fine book that sharpens our understanding of the complex interplay of fluid wartime identities and offers new ways to think about how the Great War shaped Canadians." Tim Cook, Canadian Military History
"What emerges from McGowan's tale is a rich and nuanced account of a Canadian people, shaped by religion and empire, and challenged by the greatest conflict of the twentieth century. Readers who are, like me, more familiar with the much more strident and divisive response to the war in Australia, fuelled by the opposition of the Irish-born Archbishop of Melbourne, Daniel Mannix, will find this a fascinating study in contrasts. It is well worth reading and should serve as a model for regional studies of religion, war, and empire." Canadian Journal of History