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When COVID-19 hit Melbourne harder than a runaway tram, our lives changed – literally overnight. New book Together Apart gives a glimpse into life in lockdown, capturing the isolation, frustration, hope, humour and human need for togetherness that quickly became part of our daily lives.

EXTRACTS AVAILABLE: Five stories from Together Apart: Life in Lockdown

THE LOLLIPOP LADY “Each day, I wait patiently for children to arrive and greet them with a smile, but it has become a long wait.”

THE CARER “I knew my partner Jennie had the virus, and to see her so unwell really frightened me. I could do nothing except love her.”

THE VIROLOGIST “It’s a relief that our government has listened to scientists, epidemiologists and health professionals about this pandemic.”

THE HEADSTANDERS “It makes people smile when they walk past and see us upside down, like the world is right now.”

THE EARLY ADAPTOR “My in-laws are very scared for us living in the Melbourne lockdown. Now, our family in Shanghai rings us and tells us to be careful in Melbourne!”

Photos and stories include a couple who travelled to Spain for IVF treatment, an octogenarian who remembers the last time Australia experienced food rationing, families with babies born during lockdown.

What started as a conversation over the back fence to break the solitude of lockdown has grown into a friendship and a partnership between portrait photographer Jude van Daalen and her next-door neighbour, journalist Belinda Jackson.

Photographed, written and printed in Melbourne, Together Apart is Jude and Belinda’s black-and-white coffee table book featuring 60 portraits of people in their neighbourhood: the lollipop lady waiting for the children who never come, a chilling experience of a COVID ward, the families separated by borders. We also hear from the barista serving up caffeine and counselling, the students dreaming of returning to their classrooms after six months of homeschooling, and the children rediscovering the rainbows, ancient trees and fairy gardens in their streets as the world slowed.

“Like so many others, I felt more isolated than I’d ever felt before. I needed connection, and taking these photographs was a way to reach into our community and bring people together,” says Jude van Daalen, who started documenting life in isolation in Melbourne’s first lockdown, in March 2020.

“As a photographer, I also know how important it is to document the human experience – in good times and bad. By letting us look into their own lockdown for just a moment, the people in these photos have connected us all more than they could ever have imagined.”

“Helping to tell these stories made me realise that I wasn’t the only one feeling stranded, even though, at times, it felt like it,” says Belinda Jackson, whose job as an international travel writer was abruptly put on hold in March. “We are all under pressure, all of us. From the doctor and the teacher, to the pensioner and the schoolkids, I recognise parts of my own lockdown experience in every story.”