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In Scars Could Love, Philip J. Bradbury weaves a compelling tale of quiet resilience, corruption, and the redemptive power of connection. Janice, a seemingly invisible school secretary in Ipswich, Queensland, becomes the reluctant hero in a dark web of schoolyard corruption, systemic abuse, and child trafficking. Alone and struggling to protect her daughter Kassey while clinging to a fragile sense of security, Janice uncovers disturbing secrets buried within the walls of St Bede's school—secrets that reach into the heart of law enforcement and local authority.
When Janice dares to report what she suspects, she's met not with support, but with intimidation and violence. With few allies and nowhere to turn, she's forced into hiding with Kassey. Their escape leads them into the arms of a special police task force dedicated to dismantling child trafficking networks. As the case unravels, Janice finds herself caught between fear and justice, silence and truth.
Their journey takes them to the Lucky Café, a community hub run by Geoffrey—a reformed ex-criminal whose inner light and kindness become a beacon for the broken and the brave. Geoffrey's own past, marked by abandonment, crime, and eventual transformation through unlikely mentorship, mirrors Janice's fight for a better world. The café emerges as more than a refuge—it's a place where hope brews with the coffee and community weaves itself into salvation.
Through Janice's voice—wry, haunted, and deeply human—Bradbury crafts a narrative that balances trauma with warmth, danger with tenderness, and despair with humour. With richly drawn characters like Constable Markham, the undercover sage Samuel, and Janice's spirited daughter Kassey, Scars Could Love reveals how healing begins with truth, and how even the most battered lives can ignite change.
This is a story about the quiet warriors among us, those who speak up when it's dangerous to do so, and the unlikely friendships that anchor us through our darkest trials. Both a suspenseful crime drama and a hopeful portrait of human resilience, Scars Could Love asks: what if love isn't soft or safe—but the raw scarred kind that still chooses to believe, still chooses to act?
Philip's own experience as a grief counsellor, facilitator of personal development and AIDS workshops and men's groups – and as a PTSD survivor – adds many ideas for women and girls (in particular) to help keep them safe in this world and healthy ways to turn scars to Love.
I loved the main characters. They were interesting and 'real'. I liked that Janice was quite an intelligent woman and she had a lot to offer the other characters and the reader. Kassey is developed well and her youthful innocence and typical young teenager attitudes and behaviours are realistic. All the characters were well drawn. Loved the slang and style of the minor characters. Every character had a purpose and the conversations between them were authentic. Excellent characterisation! Anthoula Photinos, primary teacher and writer, Brisbane
I was definitely invested in some of the characters – James, Karen, Kassey and Janice. Oh, and the owners of the cafe. Actually, loved the entire Maureen story - and George. I loved all the neighbourhood chat, all the philosophising and the chats between the women, and the kitchen chit-chats. Your writing in a woman's voice was authentic and it did not feel jarring or contrived in the slightest - I felt you captured how women communicate — especially via the dialogue and topics of interest discussed. Monica Zwolsman, English teacher and writer, Gold Coast