Important and well-conceived. . . . Provides a valuable dataset with which to critically interrogate available historical accounts of the Great Famine, daily life for Ireland’s poorer classes, the experiences of being inmates, and conditions within Ireland’s workhouses.""--Journal of Anthropological Research “Keenly anticipated. . . . Shows how archaeology can help both academic and non-specialist readers to comprehend the lives of even the most unfortunate.""--Antiquity ""Sets Irish archaeology on an exciting new course by tangibly proving the harshness of the famine and the workhouse system.""--Charles E. Orser Jr., author of The Archaeology of Race and Racialization in Historic America""Sheds critical new light on the actualities of daily life in Famine-era Ireland, challenges some of the myths about the horrors of the workhouse experience, and restores humanity to the nameless dead.""--Audrey Horning, author of Ireland in the Virginian Sea: Colonialism in the British Atlantic