This is a fascinating and moving portrait of the people who are suffering in a more divided and less egalitarian Australian society. Based on the author's conversations with hundreds of people living in three areas commonly described as 'disadvantaged' - Inala in Queensland, Mount Druitt in New South Wales and Broadmeadows in Victoria - this is a book in which impoverished Australians, who are often absent from debates about poverty, tell their own stories. Some are funny, others are sad. There are stories about loss, despair and an uncertain future they can hardly bear to tell. But there are also stories about hope, and the capacity of poorer people to imagine and create a fairer world. Rather than focusing on abstractions such as 'the underclass', this book provides an intimate account of real people's fears, hopes and dilemmas in the face of growing inequality, entrenched unemployment, and fading opportunities for the young. <BR><BR>
After his oil rig is met with disaster, Nika wakes with no memory of who or where he is. Guided by a talking cat, he quickly learns that he's a stranger to the land and must try to find a way home...
A riveting, funny coming-of-age story- the first volume in Pirkko Saisio's award-winning Helsinki trilogy'Grandpa says everyone should leave me alone. If I want to be a boy, then I'm a boy- simple as...
I have always been someone who carried the weight of my past like a heavy cloak, hiding the parts of myself I didn't want anyone to see. I spent countless years trapped in the shadows of my mistakes,...