
Non-fiction – ebook; Harper Collins; 528 pages; 2019.
I was mid-way through reading Patrick Radden Keefe’s Say Nothing, his award-winning non-fiction book about The Troubles in Northern Ireland, when Gerry Adams, the former Sinn Féin leader, appeared in the High Court in London. He was being sued for symbolic £1 damages by three victims of Troubles-era bombings on the UK mainland. Adams has long denied ever being a member of the Irish Republican Army (IRA).
By the time I finished the book, the civil case had been withdrawn (see here), though the claimants described it as “a significant and legitimate attempt to establish the truth about responsibility for events during the Troubles”. Despite nine days of hearings, we are no closer to any settled version of that truth.
Like the book itself, the case circled a contested history that was shaped as much by silence and denial as by what can be proven. As the title Say Nothing^^ suggests, the culture in Northern Ireland during the Troubles was one of guarded speech and self-censorship, where speaking openly risked exposure, reprisal or betrayal.
Based on four years of research, Radden Keefe’s narrative non-fiction is a gripping account of a complex, violent history. He filters the wider conflict through a single disappearance — the 1972 abduction of Jean McConville, a widowed mother of ten who was taken from her home and never seen alive again.
The book tells the stories of those connected to the case: Dolours Price, a Provisional IRA member; Brendan Hughes, a senior IRA commander and Belfast Brigade leader; and Gerry Adams, who has always denied formal involvement in the organisation. Through them, the book builds a history of the Troubles and highlights a network of partial, often conflicting truths.
Radden Keefe, who is part Australian, part Irish and was raised in the United States, explains his intent:
In the intertwining lives of Jean McConville, Dolours Price, Brendan Hughes and Gerry Adams, I saw an opportunity to tell a story about how people become radicalised in their uncompromising devotion to a cause, and about how individuals — and a whole society — make sense of political violence once they have passed through the crucible and finally have time to reflect (page 387).
Continue reading “‘Say Nothing: A True Story of Murder and Memory in Northern Ireland’ by Patrick Radden Keefe”














