Tracking the Australian Adventures of My Intrepid Victorian Ancestors: The Singing Line
19.00 JOD
Please allow 2 – 5 weeks for delivery of this item
Description
Following the tradition of Daisy Bates in the Desert and In Patagonia, Alice Thomson conjures up a country of unimaginable strangeness and beauty.In 1855, Charles Todd and his impetuous young bride Alice–for whom Alice Springs would be named–left the comfort of Victorian England for the wilds of South Australia, a place so isolated that letters from home took five months to arrive. It was Charles’s dream to improve this situtaion. In 1870, Todd set out with an army of men, supplies, and Afghan camels to run a telegraph line–“the singing line”–from Adelaide in the south to Darwin in the north.Braving scorching sun, flies, mosquitoes, drenching rains, and all manner of terrible food, Alice Thomson and her husband retraced that trek more than a century later. The result is a wry and mesmerizing narrative–combining the delights of travel writing, family memoir, and colonial history in a thoroughly enjoyable tale.
Additional information
| Weight | 0.3603852 kg |
|---|---|
| Dimensions | 1.27 × 13.97 × 21.59 cm |
| Language | |
| Format Old` | |
| Publisher | |
| Imprint | |
| Year Published | 2000-10-3 |
| by |
Only logged in customers who have purchased this product may leave a review.





Reviews
There are no reviews yet.