Children and young people contribute their experience of the care system in powerful new book
Free Loaves on Friday, an anthology of poems, letters, and other forms of writing written by more than 100 care-experienced people with contributions from the Together Trust, will be published this Thursday 18 April.
The anthology’s 100 contributors include authors with diverse experiences of the care system aged 13-68 years old. The book features well-known writers such as Lemn Sissay, Sally Bayley, and Kirsty Capes, alongside those being published for the very first time.
Several young people supported by the Together Trust charity were involved in one section within the book – the A-Z of allyship - and the anthology was edited by one of our Trustees, Rebekah Pierre. Rebekah is a writer, social worker, and campaigner who works to raise the voices of the unheard.
“Free Loaves on Fridays is the book I wish I saw on bookshelves when I was in care. And the book I wish my teachers, classmates and the general public read, too,” says Rebekah Pierre.
“To know future generations of children and adults from care will see themselves represented in mainstream bookshops means everything.”
Department for Education data shows 81,000 children were in care across England in March and 1,371 were in Manchester – above the national average.
Challenging stereotypes of people with care experience, this collection gives voice to just some of these diverse experiences including foster care, adoption, kinship care and semi-independent living.
We are incredibly grateful to be receiving half the profits from the book along with fellow charity Article 39.
The anthology is available for pre-sale here: https://unbound.com/books/free-loaves-on-fridays