Thursday, 9 February, 2012
Quadrant Online

July-August 2009

Volume LIII Number 7-8

Quadrant magazine is the leading general intellectual journal of ideas, literature, poetry and historical and political debate published in Australia.

You can subscribe to the print edition of Quadrant or Quadrant Online, or both versions. See our subscription page for more information.

 

Books

How the Territory Found Its Feet

Peter Ryan

 

A Better Place to Live by Diana Giese; Freshwater Bay Press, 2009, $22.95.

This little book reminds me of one of those tiny electric torches, no bigger than a walnut; women often carry one attached to their handbag, and men to their key-ring. Small, yes, but they cast a brilliant light into a dark corner. Diana Giese, in plain language and from much personal knowledge, describes the heroic quarter-century of the Northern Territory’s effort to remake itself, following its total ruination during the Second World War.

Darwin’s harbour was clogged by the wrecks of sixty-four ships sunk by Japanese air raids; services such as electricity and water had ceased. Of the buildings not actually wrecked, few had escaped damage. The re-gathering population, old-timers and new-chums alike, often had to squat in some semi-ruin, and share it with the owls, possums and snakes.

Subscribe to Quadrant to access archived content

The full text of this archived article is only available to subscribers to Quadrant Premium.

To gain access, subscribers need to first login at the top of the Home page. To become a subscriber click here.