Book Jacket

 

rank 5459
word count 37637
date submitted 08.09.2008
date updated 10.02.2009
genres: Harper True Life
classification: moderate
complete

The Story

Eamonn Corr

Six year-old Eamonn accuses his father of sexual abuse, but did it really happen? The true tale of an unhappy Irish childhood.

 

Eamonn remembers his parents, Liz and Martin, fighting constantly. When he is six, though, things take a drastic turn: his parents divorce and his mother falls under the influence of Dan, a frightening and sadistic man. Over the ensuing years Eamonn is beaten, humiliated, locked up and made to work like a slave by his mother and Dan.

Throughout this time he is also coached into fabricating The Story – heinous allegations, set out in horrendous detail, that his father had raped him repeatedly from an early age. At first Eamonn refuses to accuse his father, but by means of twisted mind-games, his mother convinces the boy that Martin had indeed abused him. Meanwhile, Liz drags the case through the courts in an attempt to have Martin jailed. Martin eventually flees to England and loses all contact with his son.

As conditions at home worsen, the boy makes a break for freedom, and a cat-and-mouse game ensues involving Eamonn, his mother and Dan, neighbours, the police and the courts. But will the one person who can save Eamonn, his father, ever re-appear? And how would Eamonn react if he did?
This true tale, poignant yet hopeful, is told by Eamonn himself.


 
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tags

child-abuse, childhood, falsely-accused, ireland

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9 comments

 

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Tom Bye wrote 511 days ago

Dear Eamonn.
what suffering you have endured. This book is a very harrowing and sad story to read. you have truly written if from an open heart, and this sadness comes through loud and clear' It's a story that draws you in emotionally.
backed
tom bye' from hugs to kisses'
please have a look a mine Eamonn and back it if you like it thanks

soniasorr wrote 753 days ago
Nick Poole2 wrote 823 days ago

ARISE, AUTHONOMY GHOST!

Ease those weary, withered limbs from your coffin. Push away the stone from the mouth of the tomb.

You have one last task to perform. One last, sacred shelf to confer.

Whether you were plugger, spammer, gusher or troll, whether you flirted or fought in the forum or beavered away in the shadows, now is the time for your resurrection.

One last time. Marshall your strength, muster the last vestiges of your power and carry out your final Authonomy act:

Back my book, MIRROR IN THE SKY.

Then, only then, you may rest easy in your Authonomy grave.

Nick Poole2 (formerly known as NickP)

mikegilli wrote 1250 days ago



Howdy doody.. ready to go...I found uploading user unfriendly.. demeaning ...cheap and nasty!

If you want I'll have a look at your book and give my opinion. ..if you do the same for me!

Bur don''t put me on your list or shelf !
We don't need to play this absurd and inherently dishonest game!...........

msaraann wrote 1294 days ago

Hi Eamonn. I'm adding this to my watchlist.

Anli wrote 1326 days ago

You've gone on my watchlist as the pitch sounds so heart-rendering. will read further soon!

GillianH wrote 1350 days ago

Eamonn, just a note to say the opening chapter here is compelling. I remember I had much the same reaction reading the Dave Pelzer books like A Child Called It. I am going to add you to my watchlist and shall be back to read more soon.

Nesta wrote 1350 days ago

I began to read this story and couldn't stop. It is told vividly but without overload of emotion. The content is a valuable in sight into the suffering of children and the way we adults damage them - though I hope this childhood is far from the norm. A very worthwhile read. Thank You Eamonn

Belle wrote 1351 days ago

Eamonn,
What a sad tale. I love your very dry style of writing and the way you relieve the sadness with nuggets of humour. There are some moments of real pathos - I'm thinking of the tooth fairy incident for example - heart-wrenching!
I've put your book on my bookshelf and hope it does well. It's certainly a story that deserves to be told and you tell it well.

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