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The Suitcase Baby - The heartbreaking true story of a shocking crime in 1920s Sydney (Paperback): Tanya Bretherton The Suitcase Baby - The heartbreaking true story of a shocking crime in 1920s Sydney (Paperback)
Tanya Bretherton
R314 R265 Discovery Miles 2 650 Save R49 (16%) Ships in 9 - 15 working days

SHORTLISTED FOR THE 2018 NED KELLY AWARD, DANGER PRIZE AND WAVERLEY LIBRARY NIB True history that is both shocking and too real, this unforgettable tale moves at the pace of a great crime novel. In the early hours of Saturday morning, 17 November 1923, a suitcase was found washed up on the shore of a small beach in the Sydney suburb of Mosman. What it contained - and why - would prove to be explosive. The murdered baby in the suitcase was one of many dead infants who were turning up in the harbour, on trains and elsewhere. These innocent victims were a devastating symptom of the clash between public morality, private passion and unrelenting poverty in a fast-growing metropolis. Police tracked down Sarah Boyd, the mother of the suitcase baby, and the complex story and subsequent murder trial of Sarah and her friend Jean Olliver became a media sensation. Sociologist Tanya Bretherton masterfully tells the engrossing and moving story of the crime that put Sarah and her baby at the centre of a social tragedy that still resonates through the decades. **Includes an extract from Tanya's next fascinating and chilling true crime story, THE SUICIDE BRIDE**

The Husband Poisoner - Suburban women who killed in post-World War II Sydney (Paperback): Tanya Bretherton The Husband Poisoner - Suburban women who killed in post-World War II Sydney (Paperback)
Tanya Bretherton
R423 Discovery Miles 4 230 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

**Shortlisted for the 2021 Ned Kelly Award for True Crime** Shocking real-life stories of murderous women who used rat poison to rid themselves of husbands and other inconvenient family members. For readers of compelling history and true crime, from critically acclaimed, award-winning author Tanya Bretherton. After World War II, Sydney experienced a crime wave that was chillingly calculated. Discontent mixed with despair, greed with callous disregard. Women who had lost their wartime freedoms headed back into the kitchen with sinister intent and the household poison thallium, normally used to kill rats, was repurposed to kill husbands and other inconvenient family members. Yvonne Fletcher disposed of two husbands. Caroline Grills cheerfully poisoned her stepmother, a family friend, her brother and his wife. Unlike arsenic or cyanide, thallium is colourless, odourless and tasteless; victims were misdiagnosed as insane malingerers or ill due to other reasons. And once one death was attributed to natural causes, it was all too easy for an aggrieved woman to kill again. This is the story of a series of murders that struck at the very heart of domestic life. It's the tale of women who looked for deadly solutions to what they saw as impossible situations. The Husband Poisoner documents the reasons behind the choices these women made - and their terrible outcomes.

The Suitcase Baby - The heartbreaking true story of a shocking crime in 1920s Sydney (Paperback): Tanya Bretherton The Suitcase Baby - The heartbreaking true story of a shocking crime in 1920s Sydney (Paperback)
Tanya Bretherton
R444 R400 Discovery Miles 4 000 Save R44 (10%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

SHORTLISTED FOR THE 2018 NED KELLY AWARD, DANGER PRIZE AND WAVERLEY LIBRARY NIB True history that is both shocking and too real, this unforgettable tale moves at the pace of a great crime novel. In the early hours of Saturday morning, 17 November 1923, a suitcase was found washed up on the shore of a small beach in the Sydney suburb of Mosman. What it contained - and why - would prove to be explosive. The murdered baby in the suitcase was one of many dead infants who were turning up in the harbour, on trains and elsewhere. These innocent victims were a devastating symptom of the clash between public morality, private passion and unrelenting poverty in a fast-growing metropolis. Police tracked down Sarah Boyd, the mother of the suitcase baby, and the complex story and subsequent murder trial of Sarah and her friend Jean Olliver became a media sensation. Sociologist Tanya Bretherton masterfully tells the engrossing and moving story of the crime that put Sarah and her baby at the centre of a social tragedy that still resonates through the decades.

Safety in Numbers - Nurse-to-Patient Ratios and the Future of Health Care (Hardcover, 2nd ed.): Suzanne Gordon, John Buchanan,... Safety in Numbers - Nurse-to-Patient Ratios and the Future of Health Care (Hardcover, 2nd ed.)
Suzanne Gordon, John Buchanan, Tanya Bretherton
R817 R660 Discovery Miles 6 600 Save R157 (19%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days

Legally mandated nurse-to-patient ratios are one of the most controversial topics in health care today. Ratio advocates believe that minimum staffing levels are essential for quality care, better working conditions, and higher rates of RN recruitment and retention that would alleviate the current global nursing shortage. Opponents claim that ratios will unfairly burden hospital budgets, while reducing management flexibility in addressing patient needs.

Safety in Numbers is the first book to examine the arguments for and against ratios. Utilizing survey data, interviews, and other original research, Suzanne Gordon, John Buchanan, and Tanya Bretherton weigh the cost, benefits, and effectiveness of ratios in California and the state of Victoria in Australia, the two places where RN staffing levels have been mandated the longest. They show how hospital cost cutting and layoffs in the 1990s created larger workloads and deteriorating conditions for both nurses and their patients leading nursing organizations to embrace staffing level regulation. The authors provide an in-depth account of the difficult but ultimately successful campaigns waged by nurses and their allies to win mandated ratios. Safety in Numbers then reports on how nurses, hospital administrators, and health care policymakers handled ratio implementation.

With at least fourteen states in the United States and several other countries now considering staffing level regulation, this balanced assessment of the impact of ratios on patient outcomes and RN job performance and satisfaction could not be timelier. The authors' history and analysis of the nurse-to-patient ratios debate will be welcomed as an invaluable guide for patient advocates, nurses, health care managers, public officials, and anyone else concerned about the quality of patient care in the United States and the world."

The Killing Streets - Uncovering Australia's first serial murderer (Paperback): Tanya Bretherton The Killing Streets - Uncovering Australia's first serial murderer (Paperback)
Tanya Bretherton
R426 Discovery Miles 4 260 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

From the acclaimed author ofThe Suitcase Baby and The Suicide Bride, the story of a series of horrific murders that began in 1930s Sydney - and a killer who remained at large for over two decades. In December 1932, as the Depression tightened its grip, the body of a woman was found in Queens Park, Sydney. It was a popular park. There were houses in plain view. Yet this woman had been violently murdered without anyone noticing. Other equally brutal and shocking murders of women in public places were to follow. Australia's first serial killer was at large. Police failed to notice the similarities between the victims until the death of one young woman - an aspiring Olympic swimmer - made the whole city take notice. On scant evidence, the unassuming Eric Craig was arrested. But the killings didn't stop... This compelling story of a city crippled by fear and a failing economy, of a killer at large as panic abounds, is also the story of what happens when victims aren't perfect and neither are suspects, and when a rush to judgement replaces the call of reason.

The Suicide Bride - A mystery of tragedy and family secrets in Edwardian Sydney (Paperback): Tanya Bretherton The Suicide Bride - A mystery of tragedy and family secrets in Edwardian Sydney (Paperback)
Tanya Bretherton
R472 R423 Discovery Miles 4 230 Save R49 (10%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Whenever society produces a depraved criminal, we wonder: is it nature or is it nurture? When the charlatan Alicks Sly murdered his wife, Ellie, and killed himself with a cut-throat razor in a house in Sydney's Newtown in early 1904, he set off a chain of events that could answer that question. He also left behind mysteries that might never be solved. Sociologist Dr Tanya Bretherton traces the brutal story of Ellie, one of many suicide brides in turn-of-the-century Sydney; of her husband, Alicks, and his family; and their three orphaned sons, adrift in the world. From the author of the acclaimed THE SUITCASE BABY - shortlisted for the 2018 Ned Kelly Award, Danger Prize and Waverley Library 'Nib' Award - comes another riveting true-crime case from Australia's dark past. THE SUICIDE BRIDE is a masterful exploration of criminality, insanity, violence and bloody family ties in bleak, post-Victorian Sydney.

Managerial women and enterprise bargaining (Paperback): Tanya Bretherton Managerial women and enterprise bargaining (Paperback)
Tanya Bretherton
R2,074 Discovery Miles 20 740 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

This book considers key assumptions underlying research on women and enterprise bargaining, in light of unique qualitative data from the banking sector. Previous research in this field has argued that women workers will approach enterprise bargaining in a distinctly different manner to men workers. A drawback associated with much of this research however, has been its sole emphasis on women workers, without a concurrent analysis of 'male' approaches to bargaining or indeed, a refined definition of what would constitute 'male' bargaining. This book positions enterprise bargaining preferences in the context of literature on narrative identities. Four distinctly different narrative identities are found among men and women managers - the bureaucratic career narrative, diplomatic, classic market narrative and institutional market narrative. In particular, acuity of risk and strategies to minimise risk are handled differently by each of the narrative identities.

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