The boy from Boomerang Crescent / Eddie Betts ; research & interviews, Ali Clarke ; cultural edit, Jack Latimore.

By: Betts, Eddie [author.]Contributor(s): Clarke, Ali [interviewer.] | Latimore, Jack [editor.]Material type: TextTextPublisher: Cammeray, NSW : Simon & Schuster, 2022Copyright date: ©2022Description: xi, 289 pages, 124 unnumbered pages of plates : colour illustrations, colour portraits ; 25 cmContent type: text | still image Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 9781761102394Subject(s): Betts, Eddie | Australian football players -- Victoria -- Biography | Aboriginal Australians -- BiographyGenre/Form: Autobiographies. DDC classification: 796.336092 Summary: Eddie Betts grew up in Port Lincoln and Kalgoorlie, in environments where the destructive legacies of colonialism - racism, police targeting of Aboriginal people, drug and alcohol misuse, family violence - were sadly normalised. His childhood was defined by family closeness as well as family strife, plus a wonderful freedom that he and his cousins exploited to the full - for better and for worse. When he made the decision to take his talents across the Nullarbor to Melbourne to chase his footballing dreams everything changed. Over the ensuing years, Betts became a true giant of the sport: 300-plus games, 600-plus goals, multiple All-Australian nods and Goal of the Year awards, and a league-wide popularity rarely seen in the hyper-tribal AFL. Along the way, he battled various demons - gambling, alcohol, the paparazzi - before his turbulent youth settled into responsible maturity. Today, the man the Melbourne tabloids once dubbed 'bad boy Betts' is a dedicated husband and father, a respected community leader and an increasingly outspoken social activist.
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Wundowie Adult Non Fiction
B BET (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 31111085557492

Eddie Betts grew up in Port Lincoln and Kalgoorlie, in environments where the destructive legacies of colonialism - racism, police targeting of Aboriginal people, drug and alcohol misuse, family violence - were sadly normalised. His childhood was defined by family closeness as well as family strife, plus a wonderful freedom that he and his cousins exploited to the full - for better and for worse. When he made the decision to take his talents across the Nullarbor to Melbourne to chase his footballing dreams everything changed. Over the ensuing years, Betts became a true giant of the sport: 300-plus games, 600-plus goals, multiple All-Australian nods and Goal of the Year awards, and a league-wide popularity rarely seen in the hyper-tribal AFL. Along the way, he battled various demons - gambling, alcohol, the paparazzi - before his turbulent youth settled into responsible maturity. Today, the man the Melbourne tabloids once dubbed 'bad boy Betts' is a dedicated husband and father, a respected community leader and an increasingly outspoken social activist.

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