| | |
| Author | Melissa Lucashenko |
|---|---|
| Language | English, Aboriginal Australian English, Bundjalung, Yugambeh |
| Genre | novel |
| Publisher | University of Queensland Press, Australia |
Publication date | 2013 |
| Publication place | Australia |
| Media type | Print (Paperback) |
| Pages | 280 |
| ISBN | 9780702239199 |
| Preceded by | Uptown Girl |
| Followed by | Too Much Lip |
Mullumbimby (2013) is a novel by Australian author Melissa Lucashenko. It concerns Jo Breen, a Bundjalung woman, who buys some of her country and the conflicts that arises. Mullumbimby won the Fiction category of the Queensland Literary Awards in 2013.
Following her divorce, Jo Breen mows the lawns at a cemetery for white settlers in the small town of Mullumbimby, inland from the north coast of New South Wales. She works to buy herself a block of land and to care for herself and her teenage daughter. Breen is a Goorie, an Indigenous woman from the local area, and her relationship to the land she owns is deep-felt and defining.
Jo becomes embroiled in a local Native Title dispute between two rival Aboriginal families, which leads her to profound discoveries about culture, and her and her daughter's place in it.
...honest and nuanced in the way it treats the cultural warfare that can ensue in bitter disputes over native title.
An exploration of the relationship between indigenous Australians and their country, Mullumbimby gives readers a sense of the complexities of living as an Aboriginal woman in contemporary Australia.