A Room At The Top
By (Author) Heath Ducker
By (author) Samantha Trenoweth
Random House Australia
William Heinemann Australia
1st July 2009
Australia
General
Non Fiction
Child abuse
Social work
305.23509944
Paperback
390
Width 152mm, Height 233mm, Spine 29mm
510g
Heath Ducker grew up on the wrong side of the tracks. He lived with his emotionally fragile, single mother and nine siblings, conceived with half a dozen different fathers, none of whom ever moved in. Most days, there was nothing to eat but breakfast cereal. Just when it seemed things couldn't get any worse, soon after Heath's twelfth birthday, he was sexually abused by the father of his only real friend. However, Heath was determined, from the outset, that he would not let his circumstances beat him. Now, at 25 years old and as a result of extraordinary courage and resilience, Heath is a lawyer with a passionate commitment to improving the lot of underprivileged kids. He lobbies politicians on their behalf, gives his weekends over to voluntary work at camps for teenagers in trouble and he leads treks for young people along the notorious Kokoda Track in the highlands of New Guinea. Kevin Rudd, the Prime Minister of Australia, presented him with ADC's Leadership Award 2008. Now, in A Room at the Top, he tells his story in his own words.
Heath Ducker is a remarkable young man who threw off the shackles of an almost Dickensian childhood and achieved professional and personal success. One of 10 children with many different fathers, Heath lived in abject poverty in a run down house. At the age of 12, he was sexually abused by his best friend's father. The Sydney-based 'Youth Insearch' organisation became his saviour. It brought him into contact with other young people, some of whom had managed to overcome extraordinary deprivation. Their stories inspired the young Heath Ducker to work to overcome the handicaps of his own difficult background. He seized on education as his ticket out of the cycle of deprivation. Unable to study in the chaos and noise of a crowded house, he retreated to the rooftops to study. Heath is now a Lawyer at Gadens Lawyers, Sydney; a Trek Leader on the Kokoda Track with Adventure Kokoda; Patron of Butterfly Day (children in war); Leader, Youth Insearch Foundation and a Director of the Aunties and Uncles Co-Operative Family Project. Heath was a Director, Board of the Youth Insearch Foundation (1997-2005); Lawyer, South Asian Human Rights Documentation Centre (2005) and Co-Founder of the Young Insearch Project (1997). Heath was a leader of the team responsible for setting up Youth Insearch in New Zealand and the United Kingdom. Heath has held audiences with former Prime Minister John Howard and former Premier of NSW Bob Carr to advise on Youth Affairs and has appeared on "Australian Story" and in books "100 to1 An Australian Journey"; "Mosaic" and in several newspapers and radio shows. In May this year The Prime Minister of Australia, The Hon Kevin Rudd MP presented Heath with ADC's Australian Leadership Award 2008, presented to only 26 people from across Australia. Heath is also a recipient of the selective Rotary Youth Leadership and Service Above Self Awards. Heath was selected as Executive Officer upon Australia's Tall Sailing Ship the Young Endeavour in 2004. Heath is also a renowned speaker on "overcoming adversity" and "social change and activism in the 21st century". Samantha Trenoweth has written and edited books of biography and fiction, including The Future of God, A Big Life (with Jenny Kee), 1001 Australians (with Toby Creswell) and Screwed (with Ruth Hessey). Her work as a journalist and editor has spanned much of the Australian media, appearing in The Sydney Morning Herald, The Australian, Rolling Stone, Juice, Vogue Australia, HQ, in ABC Magazines and on ABC Radio.