Read through the rules and wasn't sure if this is an overly broad question or not. Sorry if it is. But I'd be very interesting in reading up on anything up on what life would have been like in bronze age Ireland (or Europe in general if reading material specifically about Ireland that's not too dense for a lay person is rare.
Any and all information would be interesting to be honest. The tools, clothes, dwellings, etc people would have had, how they lived and organised, professions that would have existed, any surviving lore and mythology, even what the landscape would have been like and what wildlife would have lived in Ireland during the bronze age.
Sorry if that's too broad a scope.
I really enjoy reading Francis Pryor's "Britain BC"
http://www.amazon.com/Britain-BC-Ireland-Before-Romans/dp/000712693X
It covers a longer time-span than just the Bronze Age, but it is quite well written.
Someone may be able to give you some answers here but I'd also encourage you to head over to r/AskAnthropology and/or r/Archaeology and ask there as Bronze Age Ireland is technically a pre-historic subject more the purview of archaeologists than historians.
I have In Search of Ancient Ireland by Carmel McCaffrey. I really enjoyed reading that one.