Margins
The Gene Pool book cover
The Gene Pool
2019
First Published
5.00
Average Rating
335
Number of Pages

Part of Series

In the fifth and final novel in the Nirvana series, Jen and Jo both find themselves embroiled in unexpected ways in family crises. It’s especially surprising for Jo, who never knew she had a family in the first place. Jen too has to question her decision to cut herself off from her judgemental brother and his family. Meanwhile, there’s murky stuff going on round the closure of a local swimming pool and the Nirvanans go into battle against local government corruption. In the process, Jen and Jo discover that blood relations can be as important as their alternative Nirvana family.
Avg Rating
5.00
Number of Ratings
2
5 STARS
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4 STARS
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3 STARS
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2 STARS
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1 STARS
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Author

Debi Alper
Author · 6 books

I was born into a working class Jewish family (yes, we do exist!) in north London and became active in radical politics in the 70s. In 1982, I went to Grenada and lived there on and off for the following four years, experiencing the revolution, the coup and subsequent US invasion and aftermath. For full details, see my Revo Blog. On my return to London, I worked as a finance officer for Jewish Women in London (an oral history project) and Women Focusing (a national women’s photography organisation) and took a diploma in photojournalism at London College of Printing. Together with two friends on the course, we formed a photojournalism collective, working in the not-for-profit sector. Over the years, I also had jobs as a shop assistant, farm labourer, life model and wig maker – amongst other things … I moved into the Shangri-La Housing Co-op in Peckham in 1989, providing the setting for my subsequent novels. Sadly, we had to move out of the co-op when the council repossessed the properties to turn them back into family homes. I was seven months pregnant at the time. As a result, the council had to re-house us and we moved to East Dulwich in 1995. Soon after my second son was born, I joined the East Dulwich Writers’ Group although I had no previous experience of writing fiction apart from an abortive attempt to crack the women’s magazine short story market several years earlier. (Each story would start sweet enough but then gradually turned dark and twisted. Clearly my inner voice calling out …) I wrote Nirvana Bites in the evenings in long hand lying on the settee and then typed it up in chunks using borrowed laptops, fitting it in round working as a part-time finance officer and wedding photographer, as well as parenting two young children.

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