Seán
Dunne's mother died at the age of thirty-three, when he was four
years old. In My Father's House, his account of the trials and tests of a childhood
in Waterford in the 1960s, touched a communal heart when it was
published first in 1991, and became a bestseller.
This eloquent testimony to one fractured family's capacity to prevail,
including the heroic roles enacted by Seán's father, Richie, and
their housekeeper, Tessie, unfolds with an understated dignity.
Acute loss and vivid recall yield wry and poignant truths. Seán
Dunne's disarmingly simple prose scrutinizes social history in
an Irish housing-estate, with its stories of tragedy and resilience,
through the lens of personal experience. Told with honesty, humour
and love, it endures also as the record of a spiritual odyssey
and growth.