Kick the Tin

A$22.95

Doris Kartinyeri

When Doris Kartinyeri was a month old, her mother died. The family gathered to mourn their loss and welcome the new baby home. But Doris never arrived to live with her family - she was stolen from the hospital and placed in Colebrook Home, where she stayed for the next fourteen years. The legacy of being a member of the Stolen Generations continued for Doris as she was placed in white homes as a virtual slave, struggled through relationships and suffered with anxiety and mental illness.

2000 | ISBN 9781875559954 | Paperback | 200 x 130 mm | 140 pp

Quantity:
Add To Cart

Doris Kartinyeri

When Doris Kartinyeri was a month old, her mother died. The family gathered to mourn their loss and welcome the new baby home. But Doris never arrived to live with her family - she was stolen from the hospital and placed in Colebrook Home, where she stayed for the next fourteen years. The legacy of being a member of the Stolen Generations continued for Doris as she was placed in white homes as a virtual slave, struggled through relationships and suffered with anxiety and mental illness.

2000 | ISBN 9781875559954 | Paperback | 200 x 130 mm | 140 pp

Doris Kartinyeri

When Doris Kartinyeri was a month old, her mother died. The family gathered to mourn their loss and welcome the new baby home. But Doris never arrived to live with her family - she was stolen from the hospital and placed in Colebrook Home, where she stayed for the next fourteen years. The legacy of being a member of the Stolen Generations continued for Doris as she was placed in white homes as a virtual slave, struggled through relationships and suffered with anxiety and mental illness.

2000 | ISBN 9781875559954 | Paperback | 200 x 130 mm | 140 pp



Reviews

Doris Kartinyeri has a really strong voice, ...it is written from the heart. It is a very courageous book and I am really glad I read it. 

–Ryl Harrison

Kick the Tin is a quiet, powerful book.

–Charlotte SimpsonBelletrista.com

‘[Kick the Tin] is a story of courage and survival, powerfully demonstrating how the human spirit can soar despite all the injuries and injustices which threaten to drag it down.’ 

–Lowitja O’Donoghue