“A scathing and brutally honest indictment on modern Britain”
Skint Estate is a brutally honest account of one woman's life and experience as a single mother living in modern Britain.At 29, Cash Carraway finds herself pregnant, homeless and fleeing domestic violence. She is determined to do whatever it takes to earn enough money to find a home and make a life for her and the new life growing inside her. And if this involves working 13 hour shifts in a peep show, so be it. Abused by her mother, abandoned by her father, she longs for a family and some semblance of security. But as the Tories win the General Election, she discovers that no matter how hard you try, the system is designed to stigmatize and keep you living in poverty. Zero hours contracts, being forced to take out payday loans that you have no chance of repaying, exorbitant childcare costs and constant threats of homelessness, keep you trapped in situations that no human being should have to endure. Feeling humiliated at having to rely on food banks, crushing loneliness and a dependence on alcohol equal increasing isolation and depression, with no foreseeable way out. Suicide, at times, seems like the only light at the end of a very dark tunnel. But surviving becomes living when Cash is offered a book deal, and this book is important. It highlights the injustice and extreme conditions that people are forced into. Austerity policies are designed to vilify the most vulnerable in our society, but Cash Carraway is not to be silenced and this book is defiantly angry, and rightly so.
Paperback edition
This reviewer received a free of charge product for review.