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Homesick

How Housing Broke London and How to Fix It

Published by Oneworld Publications
Distributed by Simon & Schuster

About The Book

From the author of the Orwell Prize-winning Show Me The Bodies: How We Let Grenfell Happen, the gripping story of how housing defines a city’s past, present and future.

London is broken. Only those with vast cash deposits can get on the property ladder, private rents have spiralled out of control and the wait for social housing is measured in decades. Once vibrant communities are being uprooted, schools are closing down and homelessness is rampant.

It was not always like this. In the 1980s, builders and nurses could afford family-sized homes, there was abundant social housing and long-term security for private renters.

Tracing the last forty years of housing policy, Peter Apps examines this transformation, following a diverse group of Londoners as their fortunes rise and fall across the decades amid the economic forces sweeping through the city. With clear-eyed urgency, he reveals what will happen when a generation of renters retires and climate change brings fire and flood to a city unprepared for extremes.

He also gives us reason to hope, exploring the ways London can transform again: from a market for private profit to a place that once more offers permanence, safety and opportunity for its citizens. A place to call home.

About The Author

Peter Apps is an award-winning journalist and Deputy Editor at Inside Housing. He broke a story on the dangers of combustible cladding thirty-four days before the Grenfell Fire. He has not stopped reporting on this national tragedy since, and his book on the disaster, Show Me the Bodies, won the Orwell Prize for Political writing. He lives in London.

Product Details

  • Publisher: Oneworld Publications (September 25, 2025)
  • Length: 304 pages
  • ISBN13: 9781836430353

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