The Scotsman has an article featuring excerpts written by J.K.Rowling for 'One City', a book whose proceeds will go to fighting social exclusion in Edinburgh.
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In Leith's South Lorne Street, where she and her daughter lived for three years, "a group of local boys amused themselves on dull nights by throwing stones at my two-year-old's bedroom window".
On one occasion she had to shove a drunk out into the corridor after he had tried to force open her front door; another time she had to cope with being broken into at night while she and her daughter were both in bed.
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"Violence, crime and addiction were part of everyday life in that part of Edinburgh," she writes. "Yet barely ten minutes away by bus was a different world, a world of cashmere and cream teas and the imposing facades of the institutions that make this city the fourth-largest financial centre in Europe.
"I felt in those days as though there was an abyss separating me from those carrying briefcases and Jenners bags - and, in truth, there was."
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Once, she wrote, she was so poor that, when she was tuppence short for a tin of baked beans at the supermarket checkout, "I had to pretend that I had mislaid a £10 note for the benefit of the bored girl at the till." She would also visit Mothercare just because their baby-changing rooms offered a small supply of free nappies.
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"I am proud to live here," she concludes, "and proud that my home city is committed to becoming a more inclusive place.
"One City seeks to unify: I cannot think of a better goal, for Edinburgh, Scotland or the world."
The book will be launched at the
Edinburgh Festival Theatre on December 9th.
Source:
The Leaky Cauldron