Richard Baker
Land is Life: From
Bush to Town - the Story
of the Yanyuwa People
(Allen & Unwin Aus). The
Yanyuwa people inhabited
the Gulf of Carpentaria
before the Europeans
arrived, but most now
live in the town of
Booloola, 1600km
southeast of Darwin.
Historian Baker,
assigned a "skin" in the
Yanyuwa kinship system,
gathered the people's
oral history and
produced this
fascinating story told
from the Yanyuwa point
of view and time.
Geoffrey Blainey
Triumph of the
Nomads (Macmillan UK
o/p; Overlook Press US;
Sun Aus). A fascinating
account portraying
Aboriginal people as
masters and not victims
of their environment.
One of the best books on
the subject.
Frank Brennan
Sharing the Country
(Penguin Aus). Both
lawyer and Jesuit
priest, and a former
Aboriginal Affairs
advisor to Australia's
Catholic Church, Brennan
sets out his legal and
social solutions for
reconciliation between
black and white
Australians.
Monica Furlong
Flight of the
Kingfisher: a Journey
Among Kukatja Aborigines
(Flamingo UK;
HarperCollins Aus).
Furlong lived among the
Aboriginal people of the
Great Sandy Desert; this
is her account of
Kukatja perceptions and
spiritual beliefs.
Roslynn Haynes
Seeking the Centre:
The Australian Desert in
Literature, Art and Film
(Cambridge UP UK, Aus).
The geographical and
metaphorical impact of
the desert on Australian
culture is explored in
this illustrated book,
as is the connection
Aboriginal people have
with the desert.
David Headon
North of the Ten
Commandments (Hodder
& Stoughton UK, Aus
o/p). An anthology of
Northern Territory
writings from all
perspectives and sources
- an excellent literary
souvenir for anyone who
falls for the charms of
Australia's "one
percent" territory.
Donald Horne
The Lucky Country
(Angus & Robertson UK
o/p; Penguin Aus).
Although over twenty
years old, this seminal
analysis of Australian
society, written in
1976, has yet to be
matched and is still
often quoted.
Paul Sheehan
Among the Barbarians:
the Dividing of
Australia (Random
House Aus). Sydney
Morning Herald
journalist Sheehan
asserts that while
Australia has achieved a
brilliant social
transformation in the
1990s, it runs the risk
of being torn apart on
race issues. While the
book is certainly
cleverly written, its
many critics have
labelled it a badly
researched, preachy
tract. A second edition
was completely revised
after the November 1998
general election.