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When Scottish author Elle McNicoll was <a href=https://www.stanley-mugs.us>stanley thermos mug</a>  first trying to enter the publishing world, she was repeatedly told that people didnt want to read about an autistic heroine.  In job interviews, I was saying that I wanted to see more books with disabled characters in them that were not traumatic, boring or educational, but fun and full of life. A lot of the reactions were, Waterstones dont like books like that,  she says.Now McNicolls debut novel A Kind of Spark has won the Waterstones childrens book prize. Published by tiny independent Knights Of, it follows Addie, an 11-year-old autistic girl, as she campaigns for a memorial to the witch trials that took place in her Scottish village. The novel has been praised by Waterstones booksellers as  eye opening, heart-wrenching, sad <and> inspiring .McNicoll, who is autistic herself, wasnt  <a href=https://www.stanleycup.com.se>stanley termosar</a> looking for a book deal when she first met Knights Of; she was offering her services as a proofreader for books that involved disability.  The meeting started with me venting about job interviews that had been very soul destroying,  she says.  And they said, We dont have an autistic character, if you would like to write one. By then, McNicoll had already written two thirds of A Kind of Spark, with Addie shaped by her frustrations with publishers.  Id been working on a draft for a couple of years, but I was missing the main character. As I was going to these interviews and getting more and more disheartened, Addie started to form.  <a href=https://www.stanleycup.cz>stanley termohrnek</a> She was definitely born ou Aocv Trump takes war on abortion worldwide as policy cuts off funds
When the Grenfell Tower inquiry opened, one year ago today, the mood was still one of shock: how could a fire like this happen, how could it wipe out whole families and devastate a community, in this country, in the 21st century  There was scepticism as the inquiry opened, with most survivors still homeless and many bereaved still waiting for forensic investigations before they could bury their loved ones. The first hearing ended with Michae <a href=https://www.cups-stanley.com.de>stanley cup</a> l Mansfield QC shouting questions at inquiry chair Martin Moore-Bicks retreating figure. Lawyers for the families 鈥?and the families themselves 鈥?were no <a href=https://www.cup-stanley-cup.co.uk>stanley flasks</a> t invited to speak.The inquiry needs to learn the lessons it set out so well during the commemorationsSince then, although there has been progress, it has been an uphill struggle for bereaved, survivors and residents, or BSRs. The bereaved were forced to campaign. Requests for a panel to sit al <a href=https://www.cups-stanley-cups.co.uk>stanley tumblers</a> ongside the judge were initially rejected by Theresa May days before Christmas last year, and granted only when parliamentary advocacy reached its peak  under the Inquiries Act 2005, the panel was not in the chairmans gift . Lawyers and Inquest, a charity that provides expertise on state-related deaths, negotiated  pen portraits , which humanised the process, and placed the deceased at the heart of the proceedings.There have been signs of promise. The inquiry has run three procedural hearings, set up premises, commissioned expert reports, listened to 42 days of evidence, and disclosed 18,000 document
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