#Bookreview of The Irish Yankee
By: Regan Walker
Publisher: Patriotic Books Publishing
Publication Date: September 3, 2025
ISBN: 978-1735438177
Reviewed by: Lily Andrews
Review Date: August 21, 2025
Historical fiction has to feel authentic but still pull you into a good story that will make you care about the people, not just the facts. Regan Walker seems to understand that instinctively. Her newest novel, The Irish Yankee, is the first in "The Dawn of America Series," and it’s an absorbing mix of early Revolutionary War tension, heartfelt romance, and small-town resilience. Set in 1775 in the rugged coastal village of Machias, Maine (then still part of the Massachusetts colony), the story follows Jeremiah O’Brien, a steady, big-hearted Irish-American lumberman who ends up becoming an early naval hero in the fight for independence. Alongside him is Elizabeth “Lizzy” Fitzpatrick, a young woman with a haunted past and a fierce loyalty to her family, especially her younger siblings.
Walker writes historical fiction with romantic threads woven in, and the balance in this book feels just right. Jeremiah isn’t just a patriot with sea salt in his blood. He’s a son, a brother and a man trying to protect his community. Lizzy is equally compelling, as she’s strong and you can feel the weight she carries - her grief, her responsibility, her protectiveness over her younger brother Sean. Her bravery isn’t about sword fights but more about holding things together.
The book opens with a kind of quiet urgency - smoky candlelit taverns, talk of rebellion, muskets tucked under pews - and that atmosphere never really lets up. But it’s not all fire and speeches either. There’s a real sense of daily life here: river mills grinding, fish being caught, stew being served. That grounded, day-to-day rhythm keeps the story from floating off into abstraction. It all feels lived in.
One of the things I appreciated most was how Walker handles the relationship between Jeremiah and Lizzy. They don’t fall for each other instantly, and there’s real tension, especially from Lizzy’s side. She’s wary of getting swept up in patriotic fervor when she’s just trying to keep her brother safe. Their connection builds slowly, out of trust and mutual respect. I wasn’t sure at first if the romance would feel like too much in the middle of a war story, or if the war would overshadow the romance, but honestly, it felt like both were supporting each other.
Walker’s prose is clean and confident. She doesn’t overdo it with flowery language, but she’s great at atmosphere creation. The river scenes in particular had this quiet strength to them, almost like the land itself was a character. And when the fighting finally happens, it’s not flashy or cinematic. It feels risky and tense, people get scared, and families are on edge.
I also really liked how the women were portrayed. Even though this is a story about mostly male-driven rebellion, the women are right there casting bullets, managing homes, and supporting the cause in their own way. Lizzy and her sister Annie aren’t passive. They have their own fire, and it’s believable.
If you haven’t read Regan Walker before, she’s known for her deeply researched historical novels that bring real historical figures into conversation with fictional ones. You can tell she’s done her homework, but she never lets the research drown the story. Her background in law shows up in how carefully everything is structured, but her heart is clearly in the characters. She isn’t afraid of tenderness or emotional complexity, and that’s what makes her stories stand out.
Quill says: The Irish Yankee by Regan Walker isn’t just about a town on the edge of war, but also about loyalty, legacy, and the slow, stubborn kind of love that grows when people choose each other over and over again. I’ll definitely be reading the next in the series.
For more information about The Irish Yankee, please visit the author's website at: reganwalkerauthor.com