

And now that you've got thousands of tonnes of locomotive at your disposal, you've got the definite advantage over the infected hordes. If you do not wish your image to be published, please notify staff before the event.But it's not quite over for you. Images may be used on Council websites, publications, social media channels and circulated to the press and other media organisations for publication, transmission or broadcast. This event may be filmed or photographed. Please read our Conditions of Entry before your visit. Visiting Chatswood Library: We follow NSW Health guidelines for the health and safety of our community and staff. Constant Reader Bookshop will have copies of the book for sale on the day. If you love rural historical fiction, you won’t want to miss this event.Īvailable in the Library after 1 March and from all good booksellers such as the Constant Reader.

Nicole Alexander has a Master of Letters in Creative Writing, she is the author of ten other novels. Known for her detailed depictions of early rural life in Australia, Nicole paints an evocative portrait of the once prestigious Dalhunty family falling into ruin and fighting to survive. One day his mother returns from a trip to Sydney with a strange young man in tow and invites him into their home, shining a light on a family at breaking point. How will Benjamin’s son Julian keep the family’s crumbling station alive when his father’s attempts to keep their accounts in the black just make things worse? As the eldest son, his future has been set since birth but Julian sees things differently. It will transport their very last wool clip to market. We meet the once-prosperous pastoralist Benjamin Dalhunty and his family in the summer of 1909, as they await the arrival of the first paddle-steamer to navigate the Darling River in two years.
