The Missing Piece

Usually when a friend is dying, there’s not much you can do. But what if there was?
James O’Loghlin’s best friend at university was Jum Wallner, but once careers and kids came along, they drifted apart. That was, until the day Jum felt a pain in his side and remembered he had grown up in a house filled with ‘Mr Fluffy’ asbestos insulation.
Nearly everyone who contracts an asbestos disease gets it from their work and is entitled to compensation or financial support. Jum discovered that if you got one from your home, tough luck. You were on your own. Before he died, Jum wanted to change that.
James leapt at the chance to help him. But with zero lobbying experience, how were they going to persuade the ACT Labor Government and the Federal Liberal Government to work together to help the victims of the 1000 ‘Mr Fluffy’ houses? In the middle of Covid, how would they attract national media attention? Most importantly, as Jum’s illness worsened, could they get it done in time?
This is a story about amateurs figuring out how to influence government, how friendship can drift and then be found again, and how tragedy can make it clear what really matters.
Buy Print Buy eBook‘Instructive, funny and intensely moving.’
‘This is a human story, and also a story of activism against the odds.’
‘This is not so much a book, as the human heart laid bare on the page. James O’Loghlin takes the reader on a rollercoaster ride of love, death, friendship and grief.’