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This title is printed to order. This book may have been self-published. If so, we cannot guarantee the quality of the content. In the main most books will have gone through the editing process however some may not. We therefore suggest that you be aware of this before ordering this book. If in doubt check either the author or publisher’s details as we are unable to accept any returns unless they are faulty. Please contact us if you have any questions.
Take a front seat on this road trip through the centre of Australia for an unsettling journey through history as journalist and adventurer Rosemary Cadden follows the tracks of fellow Scot, 19th-century explorer John McDouall Stuart. He seemed a natural choice to show her around this country where she's lived for fifty years. Although their boat trips were 140 years apart, both were in their early 20s when they emigrated Down Under, looking for adventure, a new life, a new beginning.
You'll eavesdrop on her conversations with locals along the way; marvel at the landscape as you move from bushland to desert to mangrove swamps; and look on as Rosemary tackles dunes and dingoes, then leeches, storms and unexpected encounters.
Through the explorer's journals and Rosemary's extensive research, you'll also discover the story of this strip of country, colonised only two centuries ago, has its share of misinformation, long-lasting myths and fake news.
At the halfway mark, as Rosemary looks up, up, up at the lanky statue of the diminutive explorer in Alice Springs, her road trip to retrace his expeditions almost comes unstuck. Who is this man she's following?
Amidst global calls for colonial statues to be pulled down, there are protests calling for this statue, first erected in 2010, to be removed. Escalating accusations suggest he committed massacres.
In a time when many of us want to better understand our history, Rosemary finds that the explorer's constant presence on this trip and the people she meets in outback pubs and remote communities, make her question what she knows and how much she still has to learn about this country she calls home.
The real journey is just beginning.
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This title is printed to order. This book may have been self-published. If so, we cannot guarantee the quality of the content. In the main most books will have gone through the editing process however some may not. We therefore suggest that you be aware of this before ordering this book. If in doubt check either the author or publisher’s details as we are unable to accept any returns unless they are faulty. Please contact us if you have any questions.
Take a front seat on this road trip through the centre of Australia for an unsettling journey through history as journalist and adventurer Rosemary Cadden follows the tracks of fellow Scot, 19th-century explorer John McDouall Stuart. He seemed a natural choice to show her around this country where she's lived for fifty years. Although their boat trips were 140 years apart, both were in their early 20s when they emigrated Down Under, looking for adventure, a new life, a new beginning.
You'll eavesdrop on her conversations with locals along the way; marvel at the landscape as you move from bushland to desert to mangrove swamps; and look on as Rosemary tackles dunes and dingoes, then leeches, storms and unexpected encounters.
Through the explorer's journals and Rosemary's extensive research, you'll also discover the story of this strip of country, colonised only two centuries ago, has its share of misinformation, long-lasting myths and fake news.
At the halfway mark, as Rosemary looks up, up, up at the lanky statue of the diminutive explorer in Alice Springs, her road trip to retrace his expeditions almost comes unstuck. Who is this man she's following?
Amidst global calls for colonial statues to be pulled down, there are protests calling for this statue, first erected in 2010, to be removed. Escalating accusations suggest he committed massacres.
In a time when many of us want to better understand our history, Rosemary finds that the explorer's constant presence on this trip and the people she meets in outback pubs and remote communities, make her question what she knows and how much she still has to learn about this country she calls home.
The real journey is just beginning.