For 14 years, Jayne Senior tried to help girls from Rotherham who had
been groomed, raped, tortured, pimped, and threatened with violence by
sex traffickers. As the manager of Risky Business, which was set up to
work with vulnerable teens, she heard heart-breaking and shocking
stories of abuse and assiduously kept notes and details of the
perpetrators, passing information on to the authorities in the belief
that they would do something. Eventually, when she lost hope that the
authorities would take action against the gangs she had identified as
the abusers, she became a whistleblower for the Times investigative
reporter Andrew Norfolk. Now, in her powerful memoir, she describes a
life spent working to protect Rotherham's girls, the pressure put on her
to stop rocking the boat, and why she risked prison in the hope that she
could help end the appalling child exploitation in that town.