<p>'An extraordinary memoir. By turns harrowing, infuriating, and inspiring, it is partly a requiem for a loved one and a lament for all of the brilliant, wonderful people the world was robbed of, simply because they were gay. The pitiless pointlessness of it all is breathtaking, but so too is the decency and love that permeates this book'</p>
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<strong>Gareth Russell</strong>
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<p>'Motivated by love and loss of his brother, this inspiring and heartbreaking true story provides a timely and powerful reminder to never take no for an answer in the pursuit of justice. Steve Johnson has ensured Scott Johnson's legacy would be a safer world for gay men, and that legacy is now enduring'</p>
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<strong>Alex Greenwich MP</strong>
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Soon to be a MAJOR MOVIE. A gripping and heartbreaking story, A Thousand Miles from Care tells the 30-year quest Steve Johnson undertook to uncover the truth about his brilliant brother’s death.
At the entrance of Sydney Harbor, the cliffs rise fourteen stories above the Pacific, like a gigantic skirt made of sandstone. North Head, one of the most memorable cliffs, is a gorgeous place to watch the sunrise. But it’s an unforgiving place to lose your footing. When Steve Johnson’s younger brother Scott went over the edge in 1988, he hit an outcrop on the way down and exploded on the rocks below.
A Thousand Miles from Care draws upon the mountain of exclusive materials Steve amassed over his 32-year fight for answers, including sealed court transcripts, police records, interviews with suspects, inquest reports, correspondence with gang members, private investigations, and much else. It utilizes unique details, interview transcripts and insights based on Johnson’s close relationship with authorities and high-ranking New South Wales officials developed over more than three decades.
This profoundly impactful book traces the steps Steve Johnson, his family and friends took to solve the mystery of Scott’s alleged suicide, navigating an openly hostile police force and a maze of dead ends, unreliable informants, skinhead gangs, a faked confession, police-connected drug rings, and setbacks at every turn. A Thousand Miles from Care is above all, a love story between two brothers but shared by everyone who worked so long for truth and justice for Scott.
Soon to be a MAJOR MOVIE. A gripping and heartbreaking story, A Thousand Miles from Care tells the 30-year quest Steve Johnson undertook to uncover the truth about his brilliant brother’s death.
The Hunt for My Brother’s Killer – A Gripping Thirty-Year True-Crime Quest for Justice
The Hunt for My Brother’s Killer – A Gripping Thirty-Year True-Crime Quest for Justice
• This is a police procedural that uncovers shocking corruption and homophobia in Australia’s police force and wider society and follows a brother’s decades long fight for justice
• The case has inspired the Sackar commission which is ongoing in Australia; this is a much bigger story that one brother’s search for justice
• There is a mega holywood film in development with a very high calibre of talent attached
• ABC and Disney and have a stunningly powerful four-part documentary series called ‘Never Let him Go’
Competition: About A Son; The Secret Barrister; In Cold Blood; The Devil You Know; Bad Blood; Unlawful Killings; A Thread of Violence; Wicked Beyond Belief. David Whitehouse; The Secret Barrister; Truman Capote; Gwen Adshead; Patrick Radden Keefe; John Carreyou; Wendy Joseph; Mark O’Connell; Michael Bilton
Produktdetaljer
Biografisk notat
Steve Johnson has been a technologist, entrepreneur, private investor, and philanthropist for thirty years, professionally specializing in building innovative technologies into successful enterprises, with a personal and philanthropic focus on education, climate change awareness, the arts, and gay rights equality. Since 2005, Steve has been spearheading efforts in New South Wales, Australia to honor and seek justice for hundreds of victims of gay hate crimes that ravaged the Australian gay community in the 1980s and 1990s, and took the lives of dozens of men, including Steve’s younger brother, Scott, in Sydney in 1988. This effort helped presage a national plebiscite for gay marriage legalization, which was finally passed in December 2017.