Secondary sources
- Abbott, Richard. Police Casualties in Ireland 1919–1922. Cork: Mercier Press, 2019.
- Barry, Tom. Guerilla Days in Ireland. Cork: Anvil, 1989.
- Bielenberg, Andy. 2017. “Gerard Murphy, Disappearing Freemasons and the Limits of Ideological Revisionism; the Cork Fatality Register for the War of Independence.” History Ireland, September–October.
- Bielenberg, Andy. “Female Fatalities in Co Cork during the Irish War of Independence and the Case of Mrs Lindsay.” In Women and the Irish Revolution, edited by Linda Connolly. Dublin: Irish Academic Press, forthcoming.
- Bielenberg, Andy, John Borgonovo, and James Donnelly. “‘Something of the Nature of a Massacre’: The Bandon Valley Killings Revisited.” Éire-Ireland 49, no. 3–4 Fall/ Winter (2014): 7–59. doi:https://doi.org/10.1353/eir.2014.0011.
- Borgonovo, John. Spies and Informers and the Anti-Sinn Fein Society; the Intelligence War in Cork City, 1920–1921. Dublin: Irish Academic Press, 2007.
- D’Arcy, Fergus. Remembering the War Dead: British Commonwealth and International War Graves in Ireland since 1914. Dublin: State Publication Office, 2007.
- Fitzgerald, Jim. Knockraha, Foras Feasa Na Paroiste Cnoc Ratha History and Folklore. Knockraha: Knockraha History & Heritage, 1977.
- Gleeson, James. Bloody Sunday. London: Peter Davis, 1963.
- Harenden, Toby. Bandit Country-the IRA and South Armagh. Hodder & Stoughton: London, 1999.
- Hart, Peter. The IRA & Its Enemies; Violence and Community in Cork 1916–1923. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1998.
- Hegarty Thorne, Kathleen. They Put the Flag A Flying – The Story of the Roscommon Volunteers 1913 to 1923. Oregon: Generation Organization, 2005.
- Hopkinson, Michael, ed. Sturgis Diaries, The Last Days Of Dublin Castle. Dublin: Irish Academic Press, 1999.
- Lewis, Matthew. Frank Aiken’s War; the Irish Revolution 1916–1923. Dublin: University College Dublin Press, 2014.
- Murphy, Gerard. The Year of Disappearances; Political Killings in Cork 1921–2. Dublin: Gill and Macmillan, 2011.
- Ó Comhraí, Cormac. Revolution in Connacht. Cork: Mercier Press, 2013.
- Ó Comhraí, Cormac. Revolution in Connacht – A Photographic History. Cork: Mercier Press, 2013.
- Ó Ruairc, Pádraig Óg, Ed. The Men Will Talk to Me – Clare Interviews by Ernie O’Malley. Cork: Mercier Press, 2016.
- Ó Ruairc, Pádraig Óg. 2020. “Britain’s Disappeared.” History Ireland, July-August.
- O’Halpin, Eunan. “Problematic Killing during the War of Independence and Its Aftermath: Civilian Spies and Informers.” In Death and Dying in Ireland, Britain and Europe – Historical Perspectives, edited by James Kelly and Mary Ann Lyons, 317–348. Sallins: Irish Academic Press, 2013.
- O’Mahony, Colman. The Maritime Gateway to Cork; a History of the Outports of Passage West and Monkstown from 1754–1942. Cork: Tower Books, 1986.
- Preston, Paul. The Spanish Holocaust: Inquisition and Extermination in Twentieth-Century Spain. London: Harper Collins, 2012.
- Radden Keefe, Patrick. Say Nothing: A True Story of Murder and Memory in Northern Ireland about the Disappearance of Jean McConville. London: William Collins, 2018.
- Shanahan, Eoin. 2010. “Telling Tales – The Story of the Burial Alive and Drowning of a Clare RM in 1920.” History Ireland, January/February.
- Shanahan, Eoin. The Hand that Held the Gun- Untold Stories of the War of Independence in West Clare. Ennis: Clare Books, 2019.
- Taylor, Paul. Heroes or Traitors? Experiences of Southern Irish Soldiers Returning from the Great War 1919–1939. Liverpool: Liverpool University Press, 2015.
- Toomey, Tom. The War of Independence in Limerick 1912–1921. Limerick: O’Brien Publishing, 2010.
- Unattributed. The Story of John Watts in the Shadow of Carron Hill. Sligo: Manorhamilton Publishing, 1997.