The much anticipated memoir by media personality Alison Mau
In my family, we never talked about the past...Since the age of twelve, Alison Mau wanted to be a journalist just like her dad. A beer-swilling, straight-talking man who was rough around the edges but could quote passages of Hamlet at will, he taught Ali everything from rabbit-hunting to throwing a punch and crafting a sharp sentence. Didn't matter that he complained loudly of his sexless marriage and put down the women in their social circle - these were just a mark of the times, Ali thought.
Ali grew up in suburban Melbourne in the 1970s, and got her start in journalism at The Warracknabeal Herald, where the entire reporting staff of the eight-page gazette was female. But from there, Ali would go on to work in some of the most infamous and patriarchal Australian newsrooms of the 80s and 90s, including the Herald Sun, and Australia's top TV news station, Channel 9, under the notorious John Sorrel. When romance took her to New Zealand, Ali made a glittering career for herself as New Zealand's media darling of the early noughties, one half of the country's most recognizable news power-couple and going on to host shows such as Breakfast, Seven Sharp, Fair Go and RadioLIVE.Then one day Ali's sister called her out of the blue for a conversation forty years in the making. In this book, Ali recounts what happened when she reckoned with flashbacks of a buried past. She began to question her whole identity, and the reason she became a journalist. It set Ali on a new path for herself and for other survivors of sexual abuse. As the leading journalist for New Zealand's #MeToo movement, Ali was forced to ask the same questions so many others face: Am I strong enough to go through this? What does justice look like?This is an inspiring, personal and honest memoir about family, love, purpose, and rising from the ashes to re-discover yourself.