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5 6 y separately published work icon Climb a Lonely Hill Lilith Norman , Sydney London : Collins , 1970 Z863545 1970 single work children's fiction children's Chronicles a brother's and sister's efforts to survive when an auto accident strands them in the Australian bush.
2 y separately published work icon Nature Walkabout Vincent Serventy , Sydney : Reed , 1967 Z958497 1967 single work autobiography
2 y separately published work icon Southern Walkabout Vincent Serventy , Sydney : Reed , 1969 Z958500 1969 single work autobiography
2 y separately published work icon Flying Doctor Hits the Headlines Michael Noonan , Sydney : Hodder and Stoughton , 1965 Z836967 1965 single work children's fiction children's
2 y separately published work icon Flying Doctor under the Desert Michael Noonan , Leicester : Brockhampton Press , 1969 Z830281 1969 single work children's fiction children's
2 1 y separately published work icon Peter and Butch Joan Phipson , Croydon : Longmans , 1969 Z816882 1969 single work children's fiction children's
14 23 Storm Boy Colin Thiele , Adelaide : Rigby , 1963 Z947092 1963 single work children's fiction children's (taught in 3 units)
— Appears in: Kumurins un Kamolins; Es protu lekt pari pelkem; Vetras zens 1999;

The story of a boy and his pelican, Mr Percival, who live on the South Australian Coorong.

2 y separately published work icon Flying Doctor Shadows the Mob Michael Noonan , London : Hodder and Stoughton , 1964 Z831319 1964 single work children's fiction children's
5 7 y separately published work icon Bottersnikes and Gumbles S. A. Wakefield , Desmond Digby (illustrator), Sydney : Collins , 1967 Z667712 1967 single work children's fiction children's humour fantasy

'Bottersnikes are the laziest creatures, probably, in the whole world.

They are too lazy to dig burrows, like rabbits, or to find hollow trees to live in as the small animals do, and would be horrified at the work of building nests, like birds. Bottersnikes find their homes readymade, in rubbish heaps. When they find a pile of tins, pots, pans and junk, they think it is lovely, and crawl in. And live there, sleeping mostly. Best of all they like the rubbish heaps along dusty roadsides in the lonely Australian bush, where they can sleep for weeks, undisturbed.' (Publication Summary)

2 1 y separately published work icon The Crew of the Merlin Joan Phipson , London Sydney : Constable Young Books Angus and Robertson , 1966 Z797916 1966 single work children's fiction children's
2 y separately published work icon Half a World Away Nan Chauncy , London : Oxford University Press , 1962 Z836736 1962 single work children's fiction children's A family leaves its comfortable world in Kent in 1911 to become pioneers in Tasmania.
9 1 y separately published work icon The Brumby Mary Elwyn Patchett , London : Lutterworth , 1958 Z42213 1958 single work novel adventure young adult The first story of young Joey Meehan, the wild Australian brumby herd, and of a wild silver Pegasus of a horse. (Libraries Australia)
2 1 y separately published work icon A Fortune for the Brave Nan Chauncy , London Melbourne : Oxford University Press , 1954 Z836784 1954 single work children's fiction children's adventure Orphan Huon Trivett inherits a remote island off the east coast of Tasmania, which holds 'a fortune for the brave'.
2 9 y separately published work icon They Found a Cave Nan Chauncy , London : Oxford University Press , 1948 Z831517 1948 single work children's fiction children's adventure

'Four English orphans—Cherry, Nigel, Brick and Nippy—migrate to Tasmania, to the care of their Aunt Jandie on her farm outside Hobart. Their arrival is greeted with enthusiasm by young farm boy Tas, and weeks of exploration and good times follow before Aunt Jandie goes to hospital, leaving the children in the care of Ma and Pa Pinner, her foreman and housekeeper.

'A few days of tyrannical treatment by the Pinners forces the children to seek refuge in a secret cave, where they set up home to await the return of Jandie. Despite Pa’s repeated efforts to recapture them, the children stay, fending for themselves in the bush, until Nigel’s secret trip to town uncovers a plot by the Pinners to abandon the farm and swindle Aunt Jandie.' (Publication summary : Text Classics)

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