Caught in Traffick

Freya Barrington's previous book, 'Known to Social Services', gave us a frighteningly realistic insight into the harrowing world of the child protection social worker. Based on her own experiences, the book was a revelation and occupied the number one spot for social work books on Amazon UK within weeks of release and went on to win the autobiography/biography/memoir section of the 2015 London Book Festival and received an Honourable Mention at the 2016 Paris Book Festival.

Freya’s latest novel, 'Caught in Traffick' is the sequel to 'Known to Social Services', and continues the story of social worker Diane Foster. Set mainly in Thailand; Diane and her partner Ethan are on a working holiday, blissfully unaware of the dangers lurking against the beautiful backdrop of white beaches and glorious monuments. When four-year-old Darcie Taylor is abducted from a crowded beach, Diane and Ethan find themselves sucked into the horrifying world of child trafficking. When Darcie’s abduction is followed closely by the kidnap of another child, there can be no doubt that a well co-ordinated gang is operating in the area. A chance meeting with the Director of Social Services Nicholas Bishop leads to a shocking revelation about the man who is still Diane’s most senior manager. Together, they become embroiled in a dangerous web of subterfuge and corruption, where organised crime syndicates and depraved sex offenders engage in a desperate battle of wits against those dedicated to their downfall. Trapped within this labyrinth of immorality are the children, who are sacrificed on the altar of greed and perversion for financial gain. With the gang’s tentacles reaching across to England, Diane is shocked to find herself faced with some old adversaries. With gripping twists and turns, hair-raising rescue attempts and heart breaking tragedies which leave you in despair; 'Caught in Traffick' will open your eyes to the disturbing underground world of child trafficking.


Caught in Traffick was awarded an Honorable Mention in the General Fiction Section of the 2016 London Book Festival.

Please do visit and like Freya’s author pages on Facebook, Google+ Goodreads. Thank you.

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Saturday 28 February 2015

News from Faraxa Publishing; Known to Social Services is #1 bestseller in Social Work Books in the UK


For all news about Known to Social Services, which is published by Faraxa Publishing, please visit the website at the following link;

http://faraxabooks.com/

Known to Social Services #1 bestseller for Social Work books

Freya Cover GOOD USE THISFreya Barrington’s Known to Social Services released by FARAXA Publishing only two days ago has just been declared the #1 Bestseller for Social Work books in the UK. Known to Social Services is available in paperback and ebookeditions. It can be obtained from all major booksellers worldwide and directly from our eStore.


http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/bestsellers/digital-text/362576031/ref=sr_bs_1

Known to Social Services Useful Links




Known to Social Services is now available from Amazon as a paperback or a Kindle download;

http://www.amazon.co.uk/Known-Social-Services-Freya-Barrington/dp/9995782871/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1425131970&sr=1-1&keywords=known+to+social+services

For my recent blog, which appeared in the UK's Guardian Newspaper, please go to;

http://www.communitycare.co.uk/2015/02/25/new-fictional-novel-penned-by-social-worker-to-show-the-impossible-task-of-social-work/

For article in Community Care Magazine based on an interview with go to;

http://www.theguardian.com/social-care-network/social-life-blog/2015/feb/25/child-protection-social-worker-known-social-services

For my Goodreads account, please go to;

https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/13548038.Freya_Barrington

For my Amazon Author's account, please go to;


For all Amazon links, please check to Country relevant to you;


 Amazon UK: http://www.amazon.co.uk/Known-Social-Services-Freya-Barrington/dp/9995782871/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1425117019&sr=8-1&keywords=known+to+social+services

 Amazon Italy: http://www.amazon.it/Known-Social-Services-Freya-Barrington/dp/9995782871/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1425117059&sr=8-1&keywords=known+to+social+services

 Amazon Germany: http://www.amazon.de/Known-Social-Services-English-Barrington-ebook/dp/B00U1NLEDS/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1425117159&sr=8-1&keywords=known+to+social+services

 Amazon France: http://www.amazon.fr/Known-Social-Services-Freya-Barrington/dp/9995782871/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1425117245&sr=8-1&keywords=known+to+social+services

 Amazon Netherlands: http://www.amazon.fr/Known-Social-Services-Freya-Barrington/dp/9995782871/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1425117245&sr=8-1&keywords=known+to+social+services
 Amazon Spain: http://www.amazon.es/Known-Social-Services-English-Barrington-ebook/dp/B00U1NLEDS/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1425117414&sr=8-1&keywords=known+to+social+services
 Amazon Mexico: http://www.amazon.com.mx/Known-Social-Services-English-Barrington-ebook/dp/B00U1NLEDS/ref=sr_1_1?s=digital-text&ie=UTF8&qid=1425117667&sr=1-1&keywords=known+to+social+services

 Amazon Brazil: http://www.amazon.com.br/Known-Social-Services-English-Barrington-ebook/dp/B00U1NLEDS/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1425117698&sr=8-1&keywords=known+to+social+services

 Amazon Japan: http://www.amazon.co.jp/Known-Social-Services-English-Barrington-ebook/dp/B00U1NLEDS/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1425117586&sr=8-1&keywords=known+to+social+services

 Amazon India: http://www.amazon.in/Known-Social-Services-Freya-Barrington-ebook/dp/B00U1NLEDS/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1425117503&sr=8-1&keywords=known+to+social+services

 Amazon Australia: http://www.amazon.com.au/Known-Social-Services-Freya-Barrington-ebook/dp/B00U1NLEDS/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1425117733&sr=8-1&keywords=known+to+social+services

Thursday 26 February 2015

Community Care Article 26th February 2015


I am very pleased to report that a recent interview I did with Community Care's Luke Stevenson is in print today. The piece examines my motivation for writing Known to Social Services and offers in insight into why I hope it might promote a more positive profile for social workers in general. 

Follow the link to read;




http://www.communitycare.co.uk/2015/02/25/new-fictional-novel-penned-by-social-worker-to-show-the-impossible-task-of-social-work/



Freya

Wednesday 25 February 2015

Article in The Guardian 25th February 2015


I am delighted to report that one of my blogs has been published today in The Guardian newspaper. The link is as follows;

http://www.theguardian.com/social-care-network/social-life-blog/2015/feb/25/child-protection-social-worker-known-social-services 

This blog came about when The Guardian invited people to write a piece relating to social work. I made my pitch, and was invited to write an 800-word piece for their social care section.

I chose to write about the abuse and dangers faced by social workers in their day-to-day lives on the job. This is a very real issue, and one, which is not isolated to social work. Work place aggression and violence affects many professionals, such as nurses, police officers, prison officers and many others who come into contact with people as part of their job.

Unfortunately, facing abuse on an almost daily level can take its toll. I know of many colleagues who have left social work due to this very reason. Many others have seen their health suffer. We are not in a role where appreciation from service users and clients is commonplace. On the contrary, given the nature of our job, we are far more likely to be met with hostility, than a warm welcome. While we might accept this as part of the career path we have chosen, and while thick skin is almost a prerequisite of the job, it does not make us immune to insult. 

So what is to be done? Unfortunately, the problem can never be fully eradicated, but we can make a stand against it. I know from my own experiences, that once a client has proved aggressive in their own home, office visits can offer a short-term solution. However, my colleagues will concur, this is not always practical or possible.  Visiting in pairs is also a safer option, but can be impractical due to staff shortages.  

It is important to try to "pick your battles" so to speak. While I am not suggesting that we ignore abusive behaviour, there is little value in getting upset with every person who presents as challenging or angry. Direct and clear communication is, in my opinion, essential. It is also vital to have an understanding of the very real fears, which people have, when faced with social services, perhaps for the first time. These fears must be openly acknowledged and appreciated.

There are many good tactics we can adopt in order to combat work place aggression, and it is our responsibility to be as prepared as we can be in order to effectively offer a service to the children we strive to protect. However, we must also have an understanding of when we are NOT in an immediate position to help. 

I can recall a visiting drama group when I was a University student. We were presented with this scenario;  

You are visiting a home to see a very young baby. The father is known to be violent and aggressive. When you arrive, he is abusive and agitated. You can see the mother and baby in a back room, but he is refusing to allow you to see them or speak to them. There is a large knife on the table in front of you. What is your course of action?

We were given five minutes to make a decision. The lecturer then went around the group asking what we would do. The answers ranged from, trying to talk to the father, to trying to get past him! When she got to me and asked what I would do, my answer was simple,

"I'd leave" was my unflinching response.

I heard a few sharp intakes of breath. Some of my fellow students were horrified to hear that I would leave and not try to help. The lecturer however smiled and said simply, "Yep, right answer".

To enlarge on my response; there would be no value in a lone female worker trying to negotiate with an agitated man who has access to a knife. That is a job for the police and in this scenario; I would of course have contacted them for assistance.


Know your limitations. Stay safe.

Freya 








Friday 13 February 2015



My debut novel Known to Social Services, published by Faraxa Books, will be released in less than a fortnight. This has understandably been a very busy and exciting time for me.

In the course of all the necessary promotion, I have opened a Twitter account. This may seem very basic to most of you, but to me, it was unknown territory, as being of a certain age, I simply “didn't get it”. My daughter will tell you about the ordeal she went through when she offered to assist me in setting up this blog, but that is another story! 

I am pleasantly surprised to say that I have managed to figure out the Twitter account, which is all well and good, but which has added one more thing to my daily checklist. Facebook, G mail, Blog, Google+, and now Twitter. It’s a wonder I have any time left for writing.

Through this latest blog, I want to give a bit more insight into the book and more information about my own background as a social worker.

Known to Social Services is in a literary genre of books known as nonfiction. This is loosely defined and fairly flexible in description, but broadly speaking, actual events have been woven together using fictional storytelling techniques.  In this way, a nonfiction novel does not have to stay within the constraints of reality, but allows the author the license to elaborate and fictionalise the story.

As the disclaimer in Known to Social Services states;

Names, characters, businesses, places, events and incidents are products of the author’s imagination or are used in a fictitious manner. 

While this is correct, there are certain themes within social work, which are fairly constant; issues such as child abuse, domestic violence, drug and alcohol issues, mental health problems, the oppression of women and a multitude of others.

Many of the events in the book will ring true to my colleagues as “the norm”.

Known to Social Services is not presented as a reference book, or a textbook. It is not intended to be deep or theoretical; it is a nonfiction novel, about the interrelated fields of social work, counselling, mental health, and child psychology and is based on my own first-hand experience as a child protection social worker. The intent of the book is to raise awareness of the challenges faced by social workers. Using the previously mentioned themes, I have used the book’s central character Diane Foster, to provide a fictitious narrative, which I hope gives a pragmatic and authentic perspective.

I was asked recently if I felt I had stereotyped the people I portray in the book. This was a thought provoking question. In my role as a child protection social worker, I worked with a specific “type” of case; ones which usually required immediate and urgent multi-agency intervention in order to safeguard the child or children in question. Inevitably, this brought me into contact with very similar “types” of families.

I have heard many of my colleagues’ state that all their cases seemed to blend into one huge case of abuse. It can certainly seem this way as you deal repeatedly with perhaps 25+ cases of injured children, domestically abused women, drug and alcohol addicted parents and sex offenders. As quickly as one case is closed, there is another close behind it, demanding attention. Prioritising a challenging workload is one of the social worker’s greatest skills.

While each case is approached holistically, and assessed on the presenting issues at the time, stereotyping is unfortunately almost inescapable especially given the parameters and the recurring themes, which present themselves to all who work in this field.

The same can be said about the stereotyping applied to social workers, which is something I hope the book will accentuate.  For the average person in the street, the social worker is often viewed as an ineffective, out of touch, useless busybody. For the record, we are usually portrayed as sandal, wearing hippie types, or tweedy academics, neither of which is accurate.

In my experience, social workers are hardworking, dedicated professionals who strive to maintain a high standard in their complex role. They dress pretty nicely too J.

Naturally, as in every profession, there are exceptions. However, the social worker is much maligned and, in my opinion, one of the most misunderstood and negatively stereotyped of any profession. I know that the greater percentage of the general public do not have the slightest idea of what life is really like for social workers.

While out in the field, I have been subject to abuse and attack in more ways than I care to recall. I have been threatened three times with a knife, twice with a shot gun and have had death threats levelled against me. I have been spat upon, kicked, punched and had my hair pulled. I have been sworn at on an almost daily basis to the point I almost became immune to it (almost). I have been held hostage twice and I am unashamed to say that know what it is to be afraid.    

I know that I am not alone in my experiences, and I am not complaining.  I chose this profession and it has been very good to me. Even with all its challenges, I loved my work and had a real sense of achievement and job satisfaction.  

In writing Known to Social Services, I hope that I have managed to achieve the balance between the reality of my experiences with the creative and fictitious writing of a novel.  

I sincerely hope that you agree.


Freya 

Monday 9 February 2015

Book Release Poster



Very excited about the new poster about my debut novel

Known to Social Services

The book will be available from Amazon from 28th February and as a download later in March

Thank you all for your ongoing support of this wonderful venture.











Freya 

Friday 6 February 2015

Book release date


I am thrilled to announce that my debut novel, Known to Social Services, published by Faraxa Books, finally has a release date. 

The book will be available as a paperback from Amazon from 28th February 2015, and in paperback in Malta from mid to end of March. The downloadable version will follow soon in March. 

In the course of promoting the book, I have sent literally thousands of e-mails to all the Universities in the UK, which offer courses in social work, psychology, criminal forensics, nursing, midwifery etc. asking them to give consideration to adding the book to their reading list.

Why would academic institutions add a novel to their list I hear you ask? Well, whilst the book is fictional in its content, the stories reflect the reality of life as a social worker and are well within the bounds of credibility - ask any front line social worker and I'm confident that they will agree. 

I have received an overwhelming response to my e-mails, with invitations from several Universities to speak to their students in relation to the book. I am extremely grateful for this opportunity, not only to promote the book, but to raise awareness of the difficulties faced by my colleagues who have made, or who intend to make, this profession their life's work.  I have of course accepted the invitations and look forwards to meeting with the students and lecturers.  

Being a social worker myself for many years, with a wealth of front line expertise, I wanted to write a novel based on my own professional experiences – one that would focus on the harsh truth of day-to-day work and substantiate the almost incomprehensible difficulties faced by the much-maligned social worker. Thus Diane Foster, the social worker central to the book, was born.

The appeal and usefulness of Known to Social Services lies in its highly authentic storylines, believable characters and riveting climax which keep readers on the edge of their seats, while instructing them as to the true nature of the socio-psychological issues involved all around. It is written to address a subject matter most people find worryingly fascinating. One need only look at the viewing statistics for high profile programmes and reality television, to realise that people actually love misery as long as it is not their own. In Known to Social Services they can, for a short time at least, step into this engrossing world of social work, mental health, and psychology, experiencing it through the eyes of Diane Foster and the lives of the children she strives unceasingly to protect.

I sincerely hope that you will enjoy the book as much as I enjoyed writing it.


Freya