Books Book Review: The Trauma Cleaner, By Sarah Krasnostein The Trauma Cleaner reveals the life of a woman who the world could have so easily overlooked, and reminds us of the messiness of life. By jitendermittal Published 11 July, 2025 Books Book Review: The Trauma Cleaner, By Sarah Krasnostein The Trauma Cleaner reveals the life of a woman who the world could have so easily overlooked, and reminds us of the messiness of life. By jitendermittal Published 11 July, 2025 Previous article How Female Friendship Can Be A Political Act Next article Heidi Ireland: ‘One Of The Issues I Tackled Early On In My Career Was Finding My Voice In A Very Masculine Industry’. All too often in non-fiction, the reader comes to the end of a book and is left thinking it would have worked better as an essay. The kernel of a great idea was certainly there but it wasn’t necessarily worthy of 90,000 odd words. Sarah Krasnostein’s The Trauma Cleaner inverts this common literary problem. Originally published as an essay, Krasnostein’s portrait of trauma cleaner Sandra Pankurst’s extraordinary life is gripping to the final page.Krasnostein first met Sandra Pankurst at a forensic support services conference. Intrigued by the prospect that it is actually someone’s job – and a highly specialised one at that – to clean up after homicides, suicides, hoarders and squalor, Krasnostein sought an interview. What she discovered was a woman even more interesting and complex than her job; an unlikely but entirely compelling biography subject. culture makingbooksgreatagain Best Of Future Women Culture The impossible choice faced by tens of thousands of Australian women By Rosa Volz Culture It’s morally corrupt. And it’s happening to one in six women By jitendermittal Culture How Toto’s* ex-husband used their children to keep her poor By jitendermittal Culture “Never an excuse”: Why Katrina still can’t stand the smell of bourbon By jitendermittal Culture Janine never thought divorce would mean losing her family and friends By jitendermittal Culture “Invisible victims”: Why Conor was forced to live in an unsafe home By jitendermittal Culture Miranda*’s mothers group helped her escape abuse. Then the stalking began By jitendermittal Culture “We can’t change this on our own” By jitendermittal Your inbox just got smarter If you’re not a member, sign up to our newsletter to get the best of Future Women in your inbox.