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Kathy O'Beirne

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Kathleen Elizabeth "Kathy" O'Beirne (born October 18, 1956) is an Irish author, best known for a controversial memoir known as Kathy's Story in Ireland and as Don't Ever Tell elsewhere, the most successful non-fiction book published by an Irish author.[1]

The daughter of Oliver and Ann O'Beirne, she was born in Dublin. However, in her book, O'Beirne claims that she was adopted.[2] According to journalist Hermann Kelly, O'Beirne was educated at Scoil Mhuire in Clondalkin from 1961 to 1969; in 1967, at the age of 11, she spent six weeks at St Anne's Reformatory School in Kilmacud.[1]

Kathy's Story was co-written with Michael Sheridan, a journalist, and published in 2005. In the book, she describes an abusive home life and subsequently being placed in a children's home where she was raped by a priest; she was then sent to a psychiatric facility and finally placed in a Magdalene laundry at High Park Convent in Drumcondra, where she was again raped, giving birth to a daughter who later died at the age of ten. She describes how, after she escaped from the Magdalene laundry, she was placed in Mountjoy Prison.[2]

All but one of her siblings dispute her version of events, particularly where their father is concerned, and deny that she was ever placed in a Magdalene laundry; also, the Order of Our Lady of Charity, which operated the Magdalene laundry in question, claims that O'Beirne was never a resident in one of their homes. According to Hermann Kelly, her description of life in a Magdalene laundry is inconsistent with accounts given by former inmates of those facilities. Her publisher Mainstream Publications supports O'Beirne's claims, stating that they have evidence which supports her claims.[2][1][3]

References

  1. ^ a b c Kelly, Hermann (October 31, 2007). "Lies of Little Miss Misery - memoir of abused girl is a fake, says new investigation". Daily Mail.
  2. ^ a b c Hourihane, Ann Marie (September 24, 2006). "A Family Divided by Appalling Memories". Sunday Tribune.
  3. ^ "Author's family deny tales of sex abuse". The Guardian. September 20, 2006.