It's a tragedy, but now, not entirely a waste.' Lifted Brow 'Interweaving brilliant reportage with memoir, Wasted delves into Australia's complicated relationship with alcohol.Timely and eye-opening.' Canberra Weekly 'There is an easy confidence to Muir's prose, which above all exhibits a perceptive eye for detail.Deeply personal and unflinchingly honest, Muir's debut book is among the best long-form explorations of how and why some Australians drink alcohol to excess.It is a striking work and among the strongest debut books I have read.' Australian 'Rough and raw and evocative.Muir is a talented writer who has blended memoir and journalistic inquiry with aplomb.' Weekly Times 'A truly insightful piece of work.Wasted is a vital, poignant piece of social commentary, and is essential reading for every Australian who drinks.' Sydney Morning Herald 'A thoughtful, heartbreaking work.' Overland 'Elspeth Muir's memoir begins after her younger brother's night of heavy drinking culminates with him jumping from a bridge and drowning in the Brisbane River. Yet by determinedly documenting the drinking culture that coddled him, she has opened vital new lines of enquiry into our duty of care towards drinkers. Five stars.' Good Reading 'Elspeth writes beautifully and honestly, documenting the shocking loss of an older brother, in such heartbreaking circumstances.' Mamamia 'Muir sifts through her own tattered consciousness, hunting for what has been lost.She concludes of her brother's death, What a waste of a life that was. With this story, which is as complex, bittersweet and rich as youth itself, Muir uses memoir and journalism for a sobering, heartbreaking exploration of what alcohol gives to young people in Australia, and what it robs us of.' Liam Pieper 'Intricately crafted.An intimate portrait of a grieving family and a nation unable to reconcile itself to the harmful effects of its drinking culture.Reminiscent of writers such as Chloe Hooper and Helen Garner.This book will help you think critically and compassionately about those who seek solace in alcohol.' Books + Publishing 'The prose style of this unheralded writer.is so achingly beautiful and assured, Helen Garner might be pleased to hand her the keys to the creative nonfiction kingdom and ride off into the Carlton sunset.' Saturday Paper ' gifts readers gorgeously evocative passages which convey a depth of emotion.Wasted is a haunting read.' Readings 'There is no lapse in urgency in Wasted this conversation is a crucial one to have. 'Wasted barrels headfirst into the alcohol-soaked heart of Australia to report on our fraught love affair with drinking. And she tries to make sense of her much-loved brother's death. She speaks with the father of aīoy who died in a drunken attack, and returns to Schoolies on the GoldĬoast. Reportage to illuminate the sorrows, and the joys, of drinking. Intimate and beautifully told, Wasted mixes memoir with Young Australians are drinking heavily, but the rates of alcohol abuseĪnd associated problems-from blackouts to sexual assaults and one-punch Why do some of us drink so much, and what happens when we do? Fewer When Alexander had drowned, his blood-alcohol reading was almost Three days passed before police divers pulled his body out of the Thongs on the walkway, climbed over the railing, and jumped thirty In 2009 Elspeth Muir's youngest brother finished his last universityĮxam and went out with some mates to get drunk.
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