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We have a very special guest this episode, Alex Howlett, who is currently a reporter with Al Jazeera's Investigative Unit but most importantly, she is Alex B's co-author for their newly released book, Wander Women: Tales of Transgression in a Bordered World - OUT NOW! In this episode, the Alexes natter about their writing processes, delving into the details of the book and what they're wearing for the launch party on 14th Dec in London. 

BUY THE BOOK HERE - https://www.hurstpublishers.com/book/wander-women/

Check out these reviews! 

A deeply thoughtful, intimate yet political exploration of women’s free and unfree movement, sharing stories from refugees, disability activists and more.

‘A searing examination of human mobility at the margins, in this age of criminalisation and violence against those who move in search of safety and opportunity.’ — Nanjala Nyabola, author of Travelling While Black and Strange and Difficult Times

‘Urgent and affecting, Wander Women brings forth extraordinary stories of courage and resistance.’ — Aanchal Malhotra, author of Remnants of Partition: 21 Objects from a Continent Divided

‘Everyone should read this. Wander Women shows viscerally that we are all united by the pain caused by the patriarchy and our longing to be free. It takes a village to change the world–and I am more confident than ever that we can do it.’ — Charlotte Proudman, award-winning barrister, and author of Female Genital Mutilation: When Culture and Law Clash

Wander Women explores the physical and social experiences of some remarkable individuals, navigating a bordered world and overcoming a complex intersection of vulnerabilities arising from war, migration, disability, sexual orientation, gender queerness and more.’ — Lipika Pelham, author of Passing: An Alternative History of Identity

‘Intimate and powerful storytelling through the voices of women on the move whose experiences and struggles are too often marginalised or ignored.’ — Leonie Ansems de Vries, Director of the King’s Sanctuary Programme and Chair of the Migration Research Group, King’s College London