Freeing Peter : how an ordinary family fought an extraordinary battle / Juris, Peter, Michael, Lois & Andrew Greste ; edited by Malcolm Knox.

By: Greste, Juris [author.]Contributor(s): Greste, Peter [author.] | Greste, Michael [author.] | Greste, Lois [author.] | Greste, Andrew [author.] | Knox, Malcolm, 1966- [editor.]Material type: TextTextPublisher: [Melbourne, Victoria] : Viking, an imprint of Penguin Books, 2016Copyright date: ©2016Description: 280 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of colour plates : illustrations (mostly colour), portraits, photographs ; 24 cmContent type: still image | text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 9780670079315; 0670079316Other title: How an ordinary family fought an extraordinary battle | Freeing PeterSubject(s): Greste, Peter -- Trials, litigation, etc | Greste, Peter | Greste, Peter -- Imprisonment | Greste, Peter | Greste, Peter | Greste, Peter -- Imprisonment | Journalists -- Australia -- Biography | Journalists, Australian -- Imprisonment | Imprisonment | Imprisonment -- Psychological aspects | Prisoners' families | Prisoners -- Family relationships | Journalists -- Egypt -- Imprisonment | Journalists -- Imprisonment -- Egypt | Prisoners' families -- Australia | Imprisonment -- Psychological aspects | Prisoners -- Family relationships -- Australia | Australia | Egypt | AustralianDDC classification: 365.45092 LOC classification: PN5517.I552 | .G74 2016Summary: "When Peter Greste's family learned he'd been arrested in Egypt, they were shocked but not panicked. Peter had been a foreign correspondent for two decades in numerous dangerous countries, and been arrested before. Moreover, he was only in Egypt on temporary assignment - he couldn't have got into too much trouble. Quickly, though, the gravity of his situation became apparent. Peter was put into solitary confinement and eventually charged with threatening national security. No evidence was ever produced, but after a sham trial he was given a seven-year sentence. Peter's family, meanwhile, went to work on the campaign to free him. Where others might have waited on official channels, the Grestes were soon managing an international media campaign, with such intensity that for the 400 days Peter spent in prison his plight was seldom out of the headlines. The process was by no means plain sailing, nor was there always agreement, but the Grestes were galvanised rather than paralysed by the crisis. Here each of them writes frankly and movingly about how they worked as a family, and the times they didn't: about the daily uncertainty, the paucity of information, the strain of decision-making, the emotional visits to Peter in prison, the incomprehensible Egyptian legal system, and, most importantly, the overwhelming support from every level of Australian society. For his part, Peter superbly depicts the effects of incarceration on his state of mind, and his battle not to construct a mental prison within the physical one. Freeing Peter is an inspirational story about fortitude, resilience, and a highly functional family whose unity proved to be the saving of them."--Website.
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Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
wnor- Book Northam
Northam Adult Nonfiction
365. 4509 GRE (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available AL42000203823B

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Includes bibliographical references and index.

"When Peter Greste's family learned he'd been arrested in Egypt, they were shocked but not panicked. Peter had been a foreign correspondent for two decades in numerous dangerous countries, and been arrested before. Moreover, he was only in Egypt on temporary assignment - he couldn't have got into too much trouble. Quickly, though, the gravity of his situation became apparent. Peter was put into solitary confinement and eventually charged with threatening national security. No evidence was ever produced, but after a sham trial he was given a seven-year sentence. Peter's family, meanwhile, went to work on the campaign to free him. Where others might have waited on official channels, the Grestes were soon managing an international media campaign, with such intensity that for the 400 days Peter spent in prison his plight was seldom out of the headlines. The process was by no means plain sailing, nor was there always agreement, but the Grestes were galvanised rather than paralysed by the crisis. Here each of them writes frankly and movingly about how they worked as a family, and the times they didn't: about the daily uncertainty, the paucity of information, the strain of decision-making, the emotional visits to Peter in prison, the incomprehensible Egyptian legal system, and, most importantly, the overwhelming support from every level of Australian society. For his part, Peter superbly depicts the effects of incarceration on his state of mind, and his battle not to construct a mental prison within the physical one. Freeing Peter is an inspirational story about fortitude, resilience, and a highly functional family whose unity proved to be the saving of them."--Website.

Text copyright © Juris Greste, Lois Greste, Peter Greste, Andrew Greste, Michael Greste, 2016

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