
Browse our bestselling books and enjoy quick, easy shopping with a smooth, hassle-free ordering experience.
Not sure if a book is right for you? Our simple and easy returns process has you covered. For details, check our Refund policy.
Enjoy fast, reliable delivery so your books reach you on time. Spend less time waiting and more time reading with the people you love.
Titles in This Set:
Show Me the Bodies
Homesick
Format: Mixed Format
Overview:
Two critically engaged, deeply researched non-fiction titles from Peter Apps that together illuminate the politics, policy failures, and human impact behind Britain’s housing story. Show Me the Bodies: How We Let Grenfell Happen investigates the factors that allowed the Grenfell Tower tragedy to unfold, laying bare deregulation, corporate risk-taking, and safeguarding gaps that cost lives. Homesick: How Housing Broke London and How to Fix It expands the lens to a broader urban panorama, tracing four decades of housing policy in London and explaining how homes became financial assets as public faith in affordable housing eroded. Together, these UK-edition books, published in mixed format, provide a powerful, companion narrative: one that asks who is accountable, what standards were sacrificed, and how future policies could restore safety, dignity, and stability for everyday renters and homeowners alike. Written in clear, accessible prose, they invite readers—policy students, concerned citizens, renters, and local-history enthusiasts—to engage with the evidence, the voices of affected residents, and practical pathways for reform. This collection offers a cohesive, authoritative view from a trusted investigative journalist on urgent urban issues.
What Makes This Collection Worth Owning:
This two-book collection delivers a complementary, reinforcing arc: Show Me the Bodies grounds readers in Grenfell’s immediate aftermath and the systemic choices that fueled it, while Homesick expands the inquiry to the longer arc of London’s housing system. Owning both in one set provides a seamless reading journey—from the tragedy’s ignition to the structural shifts that followed. The mix of paperback and hardback ensures durability and convenience for readers who value a tactile, library-worthy collection. The titles’ shared authorial voice—grounded in on-the-ground reporting and policy analysis—offers a cohesive perspective that’s rare in single-topic sets. It’s an ideal gift for students of urban policy, journalists-in-training, tenants’ rights advocates, and anyone seeking to understand the human dimensions behind housing headlines, not just the numbers behind them.
Books Included in This Collection:
Show Me the Bodies
Show Me the Bodies examines the Grenfell Tower tragedy through the lens of accountability, regulation, and public safety. Peter Apps combines meticulous reporting with accessible storytelling to reveal how policy choices and industry practices converged to produce a catastrophe that could have been prevented. The book places residents, families, and survivors at the center while unpacking the regulatory and political dynamics that shaped the fire’s spread and the response. It is a rigorous, deeply human account that invites readers to confront uncomfortable truths about safety standards, enforcement, and the responsibilities of government, regulators, and builders. This paperback edition makes the investigation accessible to a broad audience seeking clarity and justice following a defining moment in UK housing history.
Homesick
Homesick surveys four decades of London housing, tracing how deregulation, austerity, and market-led priorities reshaped homes into assets for investors and rents for residents. The book blends history, policy analysis, and personal testimonies to show how difficult it has become to secure a decent, affordable place to call home. It also looks forward, outlining practical reforms and policy remedies that could rebalance housing as a public good. The hardcover edition collects a wide range of perspectives—from tenants to policymakers—providing a rigorous, data-informed argument for change while maintaining a human-centered focus on the lived experience of Londoners navigating the city’s shifting housing landscape.
Who This Set Is Perfect For:
Ideal for adult readers who want a grounded, evidence-based look at urban housing and public safety. It suits students of politics, urban planning, social work, and public policy, as well as readers who followed Grenfell coverage and want deeper context about its causes and consequences. Renters and aspiring homeowners seeking practical insights into housing policy will find actionable ideas within Homesick, while Show Me the Bodies speaks to anyone seeking accountability and justice for a community affected by a preventable tragedy. Teachers, librarians, and gift buyers seeking serious, conversation-starting non-fiction will appreciate the set’s relevance to current debates about safety, regulation, and the future of public housing.
Key Benefits:
About the Author:
Peter Apps is a respected investigative journalist whose reporting on urban policy and housing has shaped public understanding of both Grenfell and London’s housing market. Show Me the Bodies (paperback, 2022) and Homesick (hardback, 2025) demonstrate his commitment to rigorous evidence, context, and human storytelling. Apps combines on-the-ground accounts with policy analysis to illuminate how seemingly technical decisions impact real lives—from safety standards to affordability. Readers trust his work for its precision, clarity, and willingness to connect policy with lived experience. This collection showcases his breadth—from examining the immediate tragedy of Grenfell to the longer arc of housing transformations in London—making his insights essential for anyone engaged in or studying urban housing today.
Why You’ll Love This Set:
If you care about how cities work, this pair of books delivers both the depth of inquiry and the urgency of reform. You’ll gain a nuanced understanding of what happened at Grenfell and why housing policy evolved the way it did in London, plus thoughtful proposals for how to fix it. The books complement each other, enabling readers to build a cohesive narrative about accountability, policy, and social justice in housing. Whether you’re compiling a policy library, seeking classroom-ready case studies, or searching for a powerful, purpose-driven gift, this set offers credibility, relevance, and a compelling reading experience that stays with you long after you finish the last page.
Please Note: The individual books included in this listing will be dispatched as per the original UK ISBN and UK edition cover image shown in the image.
Thanks for subscribing!
This email has been registered!