Australian Natural Health Magazine Review

3 05 2010

If you’re looking for a book to inspire
you, confront you, and challenge you
to think a little bit differently, it’s well worth
picking up Making a World of
Difference.

Written by Miles Roston,
a New York-born writer and director,
the book documents the stories of
20 amazing and inspirational people
Roston has met during his journeys.

Within each of the stories, we can
see how everyday people, and those
who’ve had more than their share of
hardship, have taken steps to make
the world a better place, and their lives
more meaningful.

Some of the stories within this book are
confronting, and will remind you of the
gritty and the unjust. But the people
who are working to help others trapped
in these terrible situations will reignite your
faith in the human race.





Making A World of Difference in Jetstar magazine

6 04 2010

Jetstar magazine, The Word:

Written by a New York-born filmmaker who’s also trying to make a difference through his fi lms on social issues, Miles Roston has focused on individuals the world over who are bringing about change for the better. The six Australians featured include Ronni Kahn, the founder of OzHarvest, which distributes surplus food to charities in Sydney.

Download press clipping here





Making A World of Difference reviewed in the Courier Mail, Brisbane

6 04 2010

Making a World of Difference
Miles Roston
Exisle Publishing, $34.99
TRUE stories of ordinary people doing extraordinary things in their corners of the globe can motivate a reader to move their world for the better, or at least want to.
Making a World of Difference is a collection of stories like that from people scattered around the world. None is famous, but all have changed the lives of those around them.
Among the featured profiles are an Aboriginal nurse who makes sure Aboriginal people run their own medical clinics; a man in Kenya who has helped glue sniffers on the streets turn their attentions to achieving their dreams; the first sex worker to be the keynote speaker at a major human rights conference in Poland; and a rebel leader from Darfur who learnt he had to listen to his own people.
Author Miles Roston delivers these stories in a kind of journalistic style – there is little romanticising and no flowery description.
Their stories have a kind of news-feature tone which is strong, objective and human focused.
These stories deliver on the blurb’s promise: Making a World of Difference is inspiring and does contain reminders of the wonderful elements that are the best parts of the best people around the world. For that, Roston should be proud.
But these wonderful profiles are topped and tailed with a kind of preaching from Roston himself about the need for more people like these.
He outlines his belief that we can’t wait for governments to make the changes we need and why individual actions can make a collective difference for the greater good.
These pages in some ways detract from the interesting, moving profiles.
Roston would have been best to let the stories of the extraordinary people he combed the world to find speak for themselves and let them move people to act.
Jane Fynes-Clinton








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