by Trish Bourke
€ 20.00
ISBN: 9781919298658
Trish Bourke's father, a questioning Catholic in a small Southern Irish town, found his faith shaken when Jehovah's Witnesses knocked on the family door in 1974. He converted in 1977. Her mother followed. Trish had no choice in the matter – but she would spend decades living with the consequences.
Unwitnessed is Trish's account of that life: growing up marked as different in a community that didn't know what to make of her; navigating the rigid expectations of a religion that demanded perfection; and the slow, painful,
necessary process of nding out who she was when the rules were finally stripped away.
The memoir moves through the key chapters of Trish's life – childhood, rebellion, rehabilitation, education, marriage, career, breakup, and de-programming – with a writer's eye for detail and a survivor's hard-won honesty. She does not demonise. She does not simplify. She understands that her parents made choices shaped by their own wounds, their own longings for love, belonging, and certainty. She asks
her readers to hold the same compassion.
Threaded through the narrative is music – a song for every chapter, the private anthems that kept Trish company through years when she could not speak freely.
ese songs are not decoration; they are evidence of an inner life that survived, even when the outer one was tightly controlled.
Unwitnessed raises questions that reach far beyond one woman's story: What happens to a child whose identity is decided before she can speak? How do we reclaim ourselves from institutions – religious, cultural, familial – that claim to know us better than we know ourselves? And what does it cost to nally tell the truth?
214 pages.
Available from 16/05/26.
Usually despatched in 2-5 working days.
Date of Publication: 16/05/2026
Paperback