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Walkabout (novel)

Walkabout
Walkabout first edition hardcover 1959.jpg
First hardcover edition (1959, Doubleday & Co.)
Author James Vance Marshall
Original title The Children
Country Australia
Published London: Michael Joseph, 1959 (as "The Children")
Media type Book
Pages 125
OCLC 11073830

Walkabout is a novel written by James Vance Marshall, first published in 1959 as The Children. It is about two children who get lost in the Australian Outback and are helped by an Aborigine on his walkabout. A film based on the book, with the same title came out in 1971, but deviated from the original plot.

The book opens with two American siblings, Peter and Mary, in a gully in the Australian outback. They are lost as a result of a plane crash. Peter says they should seek out their uncle, who is married to an Australian woman and lives in Adelaide; Mary agrees and they begin walking across the desert, but they don't know that it is across the other side.

The next day they keep walking and searching for food but their efforts are in vain; Peter thinks he notices someone. Suddenly an Aborigine seems to appear and startles them, mostly due to his nudity. Hoping to make him leave, Mary glares at him. Eventually Peter sneezes and the Aborigine laughs. Hoping to find out about the strangers, he inspects both of them but finds nothing of interest, so leaves.

Peter and Mary, shocked at losing their only hope for survival, follow him. Peter attempts to communicate with him through gestures of eating and drinking and the Aborigine comprehends their situation. He indicates that they should follow him, which they do. He arrives at a waterhole where the children drink their fill. Then, the Aborigine finds a plant which he prepares as food. After this, he begins to lead the children to the next waterhole.

The trio arrive at the next waterhole where the symptoms of the flu Peter has unwittingly passed on to him start to show in the Aborigine. He begins to worry and decides to tell the children he needs a burial platform to keep bad spirits from his body after he dies. Peter is gathering firewood so to avoid interrupting a man at work, the Aborigine seeks Mary who is bathing. The Aborigine doesn't see a bath as something private; he arrives at the pool and Mary is terrified; she begins to threaten the Aborigine with snarls and a rock. He is confused and becomes depressed, believing that he will not have his burial platform as Mary had seen the Spirit of Death in him again and he will die very soon.


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