Shelleyrae at Book'd Out's Reviews > Women of the Land

Women of the Land by Liz Harfull

by
1607230
's review
Mar 27, 12

bookshelves: arc-are, aussie-author
Read from March 18 to 19, 2012 — I own a copy

Women of the Land is an account of eight women who live and work in rural Australia. These women, choose to run their own farms, some raise cattle or sheep, others grow fruit or crop, in isolated areas of Australia. Liz Harfull, herself the daughter of dairy farmers, bases these eight portraits on interviews with the women themselves, research, observation and conversations with family and friends. The women largely agreed to participate to promote awareness of rural life and farming in Australia.

Harfull introduces each woman by exploring their family background, childhood experiences and memories, tracing the path that led the women to choose rural life. Not all of the women Harfull features were born to farming life, in Nan Bray's case for example, the American born marine biologist was an academic and executive before decided to breed Merino sheep in Tasmania. Mary Naisbitt inherited her farm when her husband died suddenly, leaving her with an 1828 hectare farm to run and four children under the age of seven to raise. Catherine Bird on the other hand is a 'station brat', raised on a cattle property near Alice Springs she now runs a 3000 square kilometer spread in South Australia.

Harfull has taken more of an academic tone towards sharing their stories rather than something more intimate which I would have preferred but each of the women have interesting stories to tell of their everyday lives. As farmers, these women are no stranger to adversity, successful farming relies on fickle weather which withholds rain for years on end, starving stock, only to destroy promising crops with vicious hail storms. Rural life is hard work with something on the station always needing attention from broken fences, to recalcitrant machinery or orphaned lambs, not to mention the endless reams of paperwork. Harfull includes a handful of anecdotes from each women that highlights the particular challenges of this way of life, a particularly vivid example is Catherine Bird's accident that ripped much of her scalp from her head and almost killed her.

The eight women Harfull features are very different yet all have something in common, and that is their love for, and pride in, the land they surround themselves with. These stories provide a glimpse into the extraordinary lives of the practical, yet passionate, Women of the Land.


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Comments (showing 1-2 of 2) (2 new)

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message 1: by Bec (new) - added it

Bec this one looks good - i've read a few like that really enjoyed them


message 2: by Bec (new) - added it

Bec I got this one the other day - looking forward to reading it - I've read a few others like this that were good


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