Accessibility Tools

  • Content scaling 100%
  • Font size 100%
  • Line height 100%
  • Letter spacing 100%
Print this page

The Last of the Camel Men

A bushman's tale, romantically hued
by
February–March 1987, no. 88

Man from Arltunga by R. G. Kimber

Hesperian Press, 193 pp., $22.05

The Last of the Camel Men

A bushman's tale, romantically hued
by
February–March 1987, no. 88

Much that is published on the Centre is from the perspective of the jet-and-chopper journalist, so it is with sheer delight that one greets Man from Arltunga, written from the perspective of a local and a bushman. The author’s knowledge of this country is of a rare quality. Not only is he interested in the White settlement of the area but he also has a broader appreciation for the prehistory and for the Black version of their history. In the thirteen years that Dick Kimber has lived in the Centre he has travelled extensively with Aboriginal people through their ancestral country. He has travelled the Aboriginal way, with Aboriginal navigators, journeying slowly, digressing for relatives, or for bush tucker, or for ceremonial business. His first-hand knowledge together with his affinity for the country made him an ideal companion for Walter Smith on their journey to record Walter’s story.

Manik Datar reviews 'Man from Arltunga' by R.G. Kimber

Man from Arltunga

by R. G. Kimber

Hesperian Press, 193 pp., $22.05

From the New Issue

You May Also Like