Book review: Touching memoir of EB sufferer’s life
Emma Fogarty with one of one of her most supportive friends, Colin Farrell, at the premiere of 'The Banshees of Inisherin' at the Lighthouse Cinema, Smithfield, Dublin, in 2022. File picture: Andres Poveda
- Being Emma
- Emma Fogarty
- Merrion Press, €15.99
Emma Fogarty’s memoir has the subtitle — Living my Best Life with Butterfly Skin — and it lives up to that promise.
She was born with a very rare condition called epidermolysis bullosa (EB) which means her skin is as fragile as a butterfly’s wings.
EB is an incurable genetic condition that affects the body’s largest organ, the skin.
It means that people living with EB are missing the essential proteins that bind the skin’s layers together, so any minor friction, movement, or trauma causes it to break, tear, and blister.

Emma is an inspiration, despite her relentless suffering, with days of agonising pain, she comes across as determined to lead as full a life as possible.

Moving, in a very different way, are the chapters about her time at secondary school, where she was cruelly bullied and isolated.
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