In Our Own Backyard -

In Our Own Backyard Paperback

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It's March 2020 and Liza, her husband and two teenage children are at home in Auckland in level-four lockdown due to Covid-19. Reflections with her family around the dining table inspire Liza to reflect on another challenging time in history nearly forty years before when the South African Springbok rugby team toured New Zealand. Casting her memory back to 1981, Liza recalls her life as a fifteen-year-old, including her first love, friendships, first-hand experiences of racism, and what it means and what it costs to find your voice and use it. In Our Own Backyard is a startling, confronting portrait of a society divided. Anne Kayes has written a masterful YA novel that considers questions of human equality that are as pertinent in the twenty-first century as they were in 1981.

Product code: 9781988538747

ISBN 9781988538747
On Sale Date 12/07/2021
Dimensions (HxWxD in mm) H216xW135
No. Of Pages 292
Publisher David Bateman Ltd
It's March 2020 and Liza, her husband and two teenage children are at home in Auckland in level-four lockdown due to Covid-19. Reflections with her family around the dining table inspire Liza to reflect on another challenging time in history nearly forty years before when the South African Springbok rugby team toured New Zealand. Casting her memory back to 1981, Liza recalls her life as a fifteen-year-old, including her first love, friendships, first-hand experiences of racism, and what it means and what it costs to find your voice and use it. In Our Own Backyard is a startling, confronting portrait of a society divided. Anne Kayes has written a masterful YA novel that considers questions of human equality that are as pertinent in the twenty-first century as they were in 1981.

Customer Reviews

1 reviews
Ideal for young adult readers.

Sue, Masterton Paper Plus Staff - August 2021

We’ve recently remembered the 40th anniversary of the clash between rugby sport and New Zealanders protesting the tour of the South African rugby team – making a stand against apartheid. This timely tale is a blend of remembrance and Liza recalling the time in New Zealand history to her family. It’s March 2020 and Liza, her husband and two teenage children are at home in Auckland in level four lockdown due to Covid-19. Reflections with her family around the dining table inspire Liza to reflect on another challenging time in history nearly forty years earlier when the South African rugby team toured New Zealand. Casting her memory back to 1981, Liza recalls her life as a Fifteen year old, including her first love, friendships, first-hand experiences of racism and what it means – and costs – to find your voice and use it. A significant young adult novel that captures the spirit of the time and the issues that deeply divided New Zealand. It is masterful to blend the recent challenges of the pandemic and the community togetherness we needed with the historical events. Ideal for young adult readers.