As someone who has been through the Australian school system, I always felt like there was a gaping hole in the history we were taught at school. It seemed like the attitude of the curriculum towards Australian history was to go into much (likely too much) detail of the last 200 years, and then mention "oh and there was 60 000 years+ before that where the original Australians lived here… Dreaming... semi-nomadic lifestyle… Rainbow Serpent…".
This book was such a relief to read, as it put everything into perspective for me. How I wish the Australian school system would teach Australian history like this, rather than being so biased towards the historic era (with a decidedly European perspective to it too). It was particularly fascinating to hear of the megafauna and the Ice Ages, and how the original people responded to climatic change, as well as how it became recorded through their legends and oral traditions.
Thoroughly recommend! (I also recommend reading this in conjunction with Dark Emu by Bruce Pascoe, which provides compelling evidence for agricultural technology (granaries!) and permanent settlements used by Aboriginal people across Australia. In doing so, he challenges the view of the original Australians pre-European colonisation (i.e. nomadic hunter-gatherers) that most of us would have.