Echoes Heard
Echoes Heard is a literary collection of poems and prose by Nimshay Bareen that gives voice to the silenced — women, children, and survivors whose pain has long been dismissed, buried, or blamed back onto them.
The book moves through three emotional territories. The first bears witness to systemic violence: trafficking, child abuse, acid attacks, forced marriage, deepfake harassment, and the relentless question society asks victims — "what were you wearing?" — instead of holding perpetrators accountable. The second is more intimate, a series of unsent letters and confessions addressed to an unnamed relation, tracing the psychological wreckage left behind by trauma: sleepless nights, self-harm, medication, and the guilt of carrying someone else's crime in your own body. The third turns toward resilience — not the easy, performative kind, but the hard-won kind built in silence, in solitude, in rooms where no one is watching.
What ties it all together is a refusal to be quiet. Every girl in these pages was told, in one way or another, "don't tell anyone." This book is the telling.
Echoes Heard does not offer easy comfort. It offers something rarer: recognition. For every woman who was called too sensitive, too broken, or too much — and for every child who was failed by the very people meant to protect them — this collection says simply: "I see you. You were not wrong. And you will be heard."