This book is brilliant and should be read by everyone. We all need a home, somewhere safe we can come back to at the end of the day, and yet this book shows us how actually achieving that, having a place to call your own, is becoming ever more of a challenge.
It is much more than an examination of the housing crisis. Whilst the book has been written by a journalist, with facts, figures and research to back up all the claims, it is also a memoir/biography of the author's life so far, detailing some of the places she has lived, both as a child, teenager and adult. She tells us about her family life, growing up in temporary housing, sofa surfing, even floor surfing at one point. Yet it is always told in a positive light and with lots of good humour.
The book covers the usual problems associated with housing, such as the lack of it, especially for minority groups, social housing, from the huge sell off of council property to living conditions associated with damp, mould and security. From the gentrification of areas and the ever increasing unaffordability of any type of ownership, be it rented or bought, to the breaking up of communities and what it means to be part of a community.
Kieran Yates isn't just another investigative journalist relating other people's stories of their struggles with housing. She has lived it herself, every aspect of it. I love the way this book has been written. It is so compelling, I just couldn't put it down. She comes across in a chatty, friendly way. Yes, she is angry at how people are expected to live, but is always able to find a silver lining in the most daunting of situations. Above all, she gives a glimmer of hope in activism, in community, in looking out for each other. An inspiring, informative, powerful account of our housing crisis which needs to be heard, but more importantly acted upon.