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‘I believe that Kieran Yates was born to write, but crucially, to write this vital piece of work. I tore through the pages . . . A book I’ll read over and over again’
— Candice Carty-Williams, author of 'Queenie'
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'A beautiful exposition of home and what it means. Yates infuses such gentle care and humanity into the exploration of race, the failings of society and government … Stunning'
— Bolu Babalola, author of 'Love in Colour'
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‘I read this in two sittings . . . it’s so incisive it’s hard to put down’
— Pandora Sykes
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'Wholly transportive and informative. With every home visited, you will leave feeling like a welcomed guest, a deeply concerned neighbour or probably both'
— Clara Amfo
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'A moving and urgent exposé of the housing crisis'
— Laura Bates, founder of the Everyday Sexism Project
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'Intimate and fascinating. Both a memoir and a social commentary of Britain'
— Annie Macmanus
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'Warm and funny. A powerful call to action against bad landlords, gentrification and class inequality in Britain'
— Symeon Brown, author of 'Get Rich or Lie Trying'
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Vital. Everyone should read it
— Vicky Spratt, author of 'Tenants'
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‘A powerful, personal and intricate tour of our housing system … exposing who it works for and who it doesn’t’
— Bell Ribeiro-Addy MP
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‘Yates writes with clarity, warmth and passion and leaves the reader wanting to march on Whitehall immediately’
— Nikesh Shukla
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Skewers the housing crisis with clear-sighted fury. [Her] warmth and intimacy breathes new life into the horror show statistics. Yates manages the unthinkable: she makes the housing crisis funny, or at least as funny as it can get’
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So relatable . . . injects a glorious dose of love and joy and hope. This is what is so special about All The Houses I’ve Ever Lived In: the side notes of kindness and community, told with beauty, folded between the pages’
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'A clarion call for housing justice and a damning indictment of the policy failures of successive governments. But it is also an invitation to consider more imaginative questions about how we should organise not only our housing, but our lives'
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Seething with rage. It is also immensely readable, and at times even funny – something I wouldn’t have thought possible’
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'This book needs to be pressed into a lot of hands’
— Joel Golby
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'Both a beautifully written, moving memoir and a stufy in how the housing crisis makes and often breaks us'
— Peter Apps, prizewinning author of 'Show Me the Bodies: How We Let Grenfell Happen'
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Skilfully combines memoir, case studies and histories of design with harrowing facts and figures. There’s a sense of humour, too, but deep down a rage that reverberates throughout. Illuminating, thoughtfully written and damning'
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