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Shaken, Not Stirred: Family Survival in a Quake Zone

Shaken, Not Stirred: Family Survival in a Quake Zone

Imagine sharing a portable toilet with your neighbours for months on end, showering in a shipping container in the fire station car park, or travelling for three hours a day on six different buses to get to and from school. Such was life in post-quake Christchurch for Amanda Crop... read full description below.

Title in stock at publisher – usually ships 7-15 working days.

Quick Reference

ISBN 9781927167045
Published 1 February 2012
Format Trade Paperback/Paperback
Author(s) By Cropp, Amanda

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Full details for this title

ISBN-13 9781927167045
ISBN-10 1927167043
Stock Available
Status In stock at publisher; ships 7-15 working days
Publisher unlisted
Imprint Wily Publications
Publication Date 1 February 2012
Publication Country New Zealand New Zealand
Format Trade Paperback/Paperback
Author(s) By Cropp, Amanda
Category Biography & Autobiography
Social Impact Of Disasters
Interest Age Young Adults
Reading Age Young Adults
NBS Text Autobiography: General
ONIX Text General/trade
Number of Pages 168
Dimensions Width: 153mm
Height: 228mm
Weight Not specified - defaults to 600g
Dewey Code 613.690993
Catalogue Code 241101

Description of this Book

Imagine sharing a portable toilet with your neighbours for months on end, showering in a shipping container in the fire station car park, or travelling for three hours a day on six different buses to get to and from school. Such was life in post-quake Christchurch for Amanda Cropp and her family. On September 4, 2010 New Zealand's second largest city was rocked by the first of three major earthquakes that between them killed 182 people, damaged 100,000 homes and devastated the central business district. Journalist Amanda Cropp, a longtime Christchurch resident, describes what family life was really like in the quake zone as she struggled to come to grips with the new normal . In the suburb of Sumner where she lives many houses were evacuated after cliff faces collapsed, and hundreds of shipping containers line the streets as protection from rock falls. More than 8000 aftershocks have frayed residents' nerves. Quake damaged roads make travel a nightmare. Yet despite all this, life carries on. The quakes have reinforced the importance of family and friends, and a sense of humour is indispensable. It's hard to comprehend how those few seconds changed our lives. I didn't ever imagine I'd resort to digging a latrine in the back garden between the olive trees but we found ourselves in a twenty-first-century city that was suddenly without power, water or flushing toilets. I met a woman in the street who said, 'Thank goodness I've been doing yoga so I can squat.' This book will make you laugh and cry. It is funny, provocative and poignant, and shows that living in a disaster zone brings communities together, that people do indeed step up and look after one another. This is a story about the resilience of a community suddenly struggling with the simplest of daily chores in a time of crisis.

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Awards & Reviews

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Author's Bio

Amanda Cropp is an award-winning Christchurch journalist who began writing a diary about life postquake for the Australian Women's Weekly. Enthusiastic reader feedback inspired her to keep the diary going and to turn it into a book.

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