MY OUTBACK ADVENTURE

Dawn, Julia Creek north west Queensland

Dawn, Julia Creek north-west Queensland

Well I’ve made it home safe and sound from my wonderful outback adventure to Julia Creek, a speck on the map about 250 kms east of Mt Isa in nar north-west Queensland. The flight from Brisbane took about 2.5 hours and I was lucky enough to have a window seat to watch as the body of Australia  sprawled out before me, all man-made straight lines at first till the lines became fewer and further between, eventually giving way to the softer curves and tendrils of river systems now dry, the veins and arteries of this wide red-brown land.

aerial view over north west QLD

aerial view over north-west QLD

Kelly, the community nurse in Julia Creek, had googled binge drinking, found my name and organised for me to make the trip. I arrived in Mt Isa, “Man Land”, populated by rugged types who worked in the mine that dominated the town, but it was still a long drive ahead. It was a steep learning curve going from my three cylinder Daihatsu charade to my rented 4WD that felt like a truck.  I was glad to have it though as the road loomed in front of me empty but for 5o metre long road trains. The landscape between Mt Isa and Cloncurry took me by surprise with its beauty, red rock mountains dotted with dark green. After Cloncurry the land flattened out and all the way to Julia Creek the horizons stretched endless and flat.

Mt. Isa

Mt. Isa

It wasn’t the red desert I’d been expecting however, but grey-green pastureland, home for thousands of head of cattle, mainly Brahmin, that graze on properties bigger than some European countries.

I lost count of the number of dead kangaroos by the side of the road, swarms of crows and hawks lifting up and circling as the car approached.

my 4WD at Julia Creek

my 4WD at Julia Creek

Finally I arrived in the one wide and empty street that is Julia Creek. I went expecting a tough indigenous community, like my sisters had experienced in Aurukun,(Paula Shaw, Seven Seasons in Aurukun), but instead found myself in an episode of McLeod’s Daughters (an Australian TV drama series set on a cattle station populated by beautiful, blonde, young women).

The “Ladies Pampering Night” (disguising a drug and alcohol awareness and STD information event) was held in the council chambers in a  ballroom with polished wooden floors. I did my interactive session based on the “Bloody Virgin” chapter in Thrill Seekers, and had everyone talking and laughing by the end. Then Kelly the nurse followed up with a talk about Chlamydia (and yes, she succeeded in getting everyone to pee in jars before they left!)

 We all then got to the pampering that included free eyebrow waxing and tinting, foot massages, nail painting, clothes shopping, and information stalls on domestic violence and drug and alcohol abuse.

I met nurses and teachers and governesses and local teens, and even real live cowgirls! But the people who made the biggest impression were two indigenous women;  Shirley who educates people about domestic violence prevention in Mt Isa and Leann who raises awareness of drug and alcohol issues. Strong brave women doing a world of good. I hope I’ll get up to Mt Isa again to work with them both.

Everybody got to take home a goodie bag filled with condoms and lube and information booklets, a copy of Thrill Seekers and one of Fifty Shades of Grey. I’m hoping some of the best-selling success will rub off!

Leann and Shirley

Leann and Shirley

The next day I had a book launch for Thrill Seekers at the local library where we sat around in a cosy group chatting about the book and I read again, this time “Mates and Mushies“.

After that Kelly drove me out to a nearby cattle station where I met Edwina the farmer and her family. The kids had a governess and a pet kangaroo called Jeff, as well as calves they roped and led around.

Ella and Rudolph who thinks he's still a calf

Ella and Rudolph who thinks he’s still a calf

They showed me their school house where they had lessons by phone and then the water feature fed by artesian bore water that they swam in every afternoon. The water comes out of the ground so hot that in summer they use their hot water systems as cooling units.

Everyone I met in Julia Creek was unfailingly warm and welcoming. They loved their tiny town and its community and I was honoured to be their guest, if only for a short time. I am very grateful to Kelly Lemon, the community health nurse for hosting me and making my trip so memorable.

Thrill Seekers is finding its own way in the world, from the women of cattle country to teachers in India. I look forward to where it will take me next.

CREATING A CHARACTER – DOUGGIE

 

Thrill Seekers

Thrill Seekers

 

When Ransom Publishing first sent me the cover image for Thrill Seekers I burst into tears. Not just because my book was finally coming to life but because the young man in the picture looked so much like my brother Matty, who was the inspiration for the character of Douggie. The expression on his face, his eyebrows, even the shirt he’s wearing.  An old friend who’d known Matty thought it WAS a photo of him. It was scary. I knew then that as a writer I’d done something right, that the person who had created or chosen this image had the same vision of Douggie that I did.

When starting to write Thrill Seekers I knew I wanted to have some sections from Matty’s perspective. But I was a middle-aged woman. How could I get inside the head of a young man with schizophrenia?

Luckily I had few old notebooks of Matty’s where he’d written some poetry and diary entires. I used his own words in the story “Douggie and the Paparazzi”.

 “And now I”m going to sing a happy song.”

Using Matty’s own words as inspiration, I found that once I started writing in first person, I soon found a voice other than my own coming through. Matty’s obsessions about his looks and stardom were easy and fun to write about. More difficult to witness, and to write, were his battles with deep despair when he wasn’t flying so high and realised his predicament as someone with a serious mental illness.

Writing Douggie’s stories helped me understand Matty better and also allowed me to share my soft-hearted, courageous brother with the world. Because he was brave, and funny, but mostly brave. In the face of a crippling illness he never gave up. I hope that his spirit of resilience shines through in the book.

The best part about writing Thrill Seekers was using the power of fiction to change the ending. In my story, Douggie, and through him Matty, lives on.

Matty

Matty at thirteen