This delightful children's story will almost certainly lead to a gnocchi-making session at your house. Make sure you have some potatoes in the cupboard! Subtly it reinforces the importance of traditional knowledge and of how it is passed from one generation to another. Sofia is learning just as her mother also learnt from Nonna. The illustrations are charming and the warm kitchen will be familiar to many readers.
Rebecca Huntley Knihy






At a time when politics seems increasingly negative and our society increasingly divided, Still Lucky shows that we are more fortunate than we think, and have more in common than we know. Rebecca Huntley, one of Australia's most experienced and knowledgeable social researchers, wants to break through all the noise and make you feel better about this country and the people around you. Our politicians are becoming more conservative, both in their policies and their ambitions for the country, but the Australian people almost all of us want to see real social change. We are more generous and more progressive, and more alike, than we think we are and we are better than our day-to-day political discourse would suggest. Huntley has spent years travelling the country, getting to know what's in our hearts and minds. Here she tackles the biggest social questions facing Australia now: Why do we fear asylum seekers? Why are women still underpaid and overworked? Why do we over-parent? Why do we worry even though we are lucky? Still Lucky is a broad-ranging, wise and compelling look at who we are now and where we are heading in the future, from someone who knows what Australians are really thinking
How to Talk About Climate Change in a Way That Makes a Difference
- 304 stránek
- 11 hodin čtení
A toolkit for understanding our emotional responses to climate change and how we can have meaningful conversations across dividing lines.
What do Australians want most from their next government? In this vivid, grounded, surprising essay, Rebecca Huntley listens to the people and hears a call for change. Too often we focus on the angry, reactionary minority. But, Huntley shows, there is also a large progressive centre. For some time, a clear majority have been saying they want action - on climate and energy, on housing and inequality, on corporate donations and the corruption of democracy. Would a Shorten Labor government rise to this challenge? What can be learnt from the failures of past governments? Was marriage equality just the beginning? In Australia Fair, Rebecca Huntley reveals the state of the nation and makes the case for democratic renewal - should the next government heed the call. "Often the claim is made that our politics and politicians are poll-driven. This is, on the whole, bunkum. If polls were influential, we would have invested much more in renewable energy, maintained and even increased funding to the ABC, and made child care cheaper. We may already have made changes to negative gearing and moved towards adopting elements of the Uluru Statement from the Heart. We would have taken up the first iteration of the Gonski education reforms. These are some of the issues where a democratic majority comes together, a basic agreement crossing party lines." Rebecca Huntley, Australia Fair
The Italian Girl
- 254 stránek
- 9 hodin čtení
Exploring the complexities of the mother-daughter relationship, this biography delves into Rebecca Huntley's quest to uncover her grandmother's hidden past following her death. As she learns about her grandmother's life in Northern Queensland during World War II, Huntley reflects on family dynamics and her own struggles with her mother. Through evocative storytelling and heartfelt honesty, the narrative reveals the intertwined legacies of love, loss, and the true essence of motherhood across generations.