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  • Published: 2 March 2021
  • ISBN: 9780143774235
  • Imprint: Random House NZ
  • Format: Trade Paperback
  • Pages: 256
  • RRP: $35.00

Her Say

Survivors of Domestic Abuse Tell Their Own Stories




Told in their own words, the stories of New Zealand women who have lived in - and escaped - abusive relationships.

In 2013, Jackie Clark launched The Aunties, a grassroots charity helping women to rebuild their lives after a period of trauma. She quit her job, turning her back on her comfortable life, to focus on The Aunties full-time, becoming Aunty in Charge and assisting hundreds of women with material needs and emotional support. Jackie has long dreamed of a publication that gives these women a voice.

This powerful new book features the stories of a number of very different New Zealand women, told their way. The collected stories chart their narrators’ lives and personal histories, through the lens of having lived with – and escaped – an abusive relationship.

Her Say is spoken from the heart, uncompromising but offering hope, redemption, personal triumph. It’s a book for all women, showing how owning our stories gives us the power to write daring new endings. It will challenge, illuminate, and empower readers – not to mention the storytellers themselves.

All royalties from the book will go to The Aunties to support their work.

  • Published: 2 March 2021
  • ISBN: 9780143774235
  • Imprint: Random House NZ
  • Format: Trade Paperback
  • Pages: 256
  • RRP: $35.00

About the author

Jackie Clark

Jackie Clark, a kindergarten teacher by training, founded the charity The Aunties in 2013 with the aim of working with women who are living with or have lived with domestic violence. She provides these women with material needs like clothing, food or money by fundraising, often through social media. Her big heart and take-no-shit attitude has won her a league of loyal fans and followers, and in 2018 she was the Supreme Winner at the Women of Influence Awards. She lives in Manurewa, Auckland.