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Talking to My Country
Talking to My Country | Stan Grant
An extraordinarily powerful and personal meditation on race, culture and national identity. In July 2015, as the debate over Adam Goodes being booed at AFL games raged and got ever more heated and ugly, Stan Grant wrote a short but powerful piece for The Guardian that went viral, not only in Australia but right around the world, shared over 100,000 times on social media. His was a personal, passionate and powerful response to racism in Australian and the sorrow, shame, anger and hardship of being an indigenous man. 'We are the detritus of the brutality of the Australian frontier', he wrote, 'We remained a reminder of what was lost, what was taken, what was destroyed to scaffold the building of this nation's prosperity.' Stan Grant was lucky enough to find an escape route, making his way through education to become one of our leading journalists. He also spent many years outside Australia, working in Asia, the Middle East, Europe and Africa, a time that liberated him and gave him a unique perspective on Australia. This is his very personal meditation on what it means to be Australian, what it means to be indigenous, and what racism really means in this country. TALKING TO MY COUNTRY is that rare and special book that talks to every Australian about their country - what it is, and what it could be. It is not just about race, or about indigenous people but all of us, our shared identity. Direct, honest and forthright, Stan is talking to us all. He might not have all the answers but he wants us to keep on asking the question: how can we be better?
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Eva_B
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Pickpick

A fantastic read and one I will keep thinking about for a long time to come. No review I post will do this justice. All I can say is, if you see this in a bookshop, buy it. If you see it in a library, borrow it. Well worth reading.

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beck8ryan
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Pickpick

Book #9: My book club read for Feb/March. Thought provoking.

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Yiggy.lou

“Racism is the creator of race. There is no science that divides humans according to hair or skin.”

LitsyWelcomeWagon Welcome to Litsy! Here are links to #Litsytips: http://bit.ly/litsytips and #LitsyHowTo videos: goo.gl/UrCpoU. There‘s lots of fun things to do: book exchanges, buddy reads, photo challenges and more! 5y
Eggs Welcome to Litsy 🤗👏🏻🌺 4y
StillLookingForCarmenSanDiego Welcome to Litsy 🍁📚🍂 4y
Crazeedi Welcome to litsy!🎉🎉 4y
3 likes4 comments
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GlassAsDiamonds
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Pickpick

A compelling, fast read that nonetheless isn‘t an easy one, this has been sitting on my shelves for years. #Booked2019 #spring gave me the kick in the pants to finally read it for the Indigenous Author prompt. I‘m deeply grateful I did.

A powerful and eloquently written piece of spectacular lyricism, it‘s an unflinching examination of an Australian Aboriginal experience that deserves to be part of the non-fiction canon of Australian writing.

Cinfhen Lovely review!! 🤩 5y
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GlassAsDiamonds
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If you‘re paying attention, this is the golden heart of the Expat experience.

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GlassAsDiamonds
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So very true. I‘m the generation who were taught about the Dreamtime alongside studies of other world religions and had compulsory “Aboriginal Studies” units in varied high school disciplines each year but we never studied *this*.

Fine, maybe the “nicer” subjects are appropriate for primary school kids but by the time you‘re old enough to study WWII, you‘re old enough to study the horrors and tragedies of your own lands as well.

Crazeedi We have to remember the past so as not to repeat it 5y
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Rissreads
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An important book that should be read by every Australian. It‘s sad to think that an indigenous man who was born in Australia doesn‘t feel like he belongs. So many injustices, Australia and Australians need to do better to be better.
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#LitsyAtoZ letter G

Freespirit I need to read this. I enjoy listening to Stan speak. I agree there are so many ways we can make things better! 5y
LeeRHarry Great read 😊 5y
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MariettaSG
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Such a great book to read by one of Australia's most well known Aboriginal people, international journalist Stan Grant. The internal conflict of identity and belonging, of being indigenous but also of other ancestry that was not chosen.

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Michelle_mck
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My fav memoirs of 2016 #bestof2016 loved them all

See All 17 Comments
ReadingEnvy I really liked the Kalanithi too 7y
LeeRHarry I'm keen to read Stan Grant's book 7y
Suzze I had to order Spectacles from Amazon.uk to be sent here to the USA. it was well worth it! 7y
Marchpane I really must read Stan Grant and Clem Ford's books soon. 7y
Michelle_mck @Suzze try bookdepository.co.uk too it's my go to 7y
Reviewsbylola When Breath Becomes Air. ❤️💔 7y
MaleficentBookDragon What?!?!? Sue Perkins! I want it now! 7y
MaleficentBookDragon Yep, just ordered it. 7y
minkyb @Michelle_mck I like how you are posting these faves in categories. Makes it very easy to add to my TBR. Thanks! 7y
Michelle_mck @MaleficentTheBookDragon oh that's awesome! The audiobook is incredible as well as she narrates it 7y
MaleficentBookDragon @Michelle_mck I couldn't find the audiobook. I'd love that. 7y
Michelle_mck @MaleficentTheBookDragon you should try audible - that's where I got it and so easy to use in the app on my phone 7y
60 likes17 comments
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Gillyreads
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December

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Gillyreads
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Pickpick

It's been said before, but this is a must read, especially for Australians.

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Gillyreads
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Asktheletters
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Michelle_mck
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Pickpick

An incredible memoir about being an indigenous Australian. A wonderful, heartfelt and shockingly honest account of the treatment of indigenous land owners over our 200 plus year history. This should be read by everyone especially Australians but a wonderful book for anyone. Stan writes beautifully - he is a renowned journalist here and was on CNN for sometime so would be recognised by many. I will be buying this book and sharing it with many

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Minna17
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This is so very true.

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Minna17
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I have just started this (seven pages in) and I can already tell it will be confrontin and an important read. I think I will be handing this one around to my family after I have finished.

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JenniBethLovesBooks
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"It wasn't the first time, and he wasn't the first, and it still happens. Black men go into police custody and don't come out."

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