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As a member of a politically left-wing group I think she wanted to bring attention to the plight of the Aborigines. I was horrified at how they were treated, similar to the Native Americans in the U.

Tracks: A Woman's Solo Trek Across 1700 Miles of Australian Outback

I think she wanted to prove a woman could do it. But most of all I think she wanted to learn what she was capable of. I loved her stream-of-consciousness ramblings sometimes hard to follow , her descriptions of the beauty of the desert, and her love for her hilarious camels and her dog, Diggity. I would love to learn what happened to her after this journey but it's difficult to find information. She said she was not after publicity with this journey and I believe her. But she's truly a fascinating woman and I wish I could learn more about her.

View all 7 comments. Oct 23, Bloodorange rated it really liked it Shelves: A fast, restorative read for depleting times. The author shows a mix of resilience and vulnerability; the desire to test her limits and the need to question the very macho society she lives in; and - which is the most interesting - the desire to get lost in the spiritual trance of the isolation and the awareness that she should not try to maintain this state among other people.

I honestly could not remember, or put into context, etiquette. Did it matter, I would think to myself, if all the but A fast, restorative read for depleting times. Did it matter, I would think to myself, if all the buttons had gone from my shirt and trousers? Would anybody notice or care? And what about menstrual blood? From my position, it didn't matter a damn whether it followed the natural laws of gravity and ran down my leg, the way it was meant to do, but would others feel the same way?

Sep 16, Jeanette "Astute Crabbist" rated it really liked it Shelves: At the age of twenty-five, the author got the wild idea that she wanted to travel solo with camels across the Australian Outback. She moved from Brisbane to Alice Springs where she spent two years learning how to handle camels, figuring out how to obtain camels of her own, and otherwise preparing herself for the trip. This was not At the age of twenty-five, the author got the wild idea that she wanted to travel solo with camels across the Australian Outback.

This was not only an interesting exploration of the Australian desert, but also an education for me about Australian men and their attitudes toward women. I also learned about the appalling treatment of Aboriginals by white Australians, which parallels in many ways the American experience of both blacks and Indians. And also, you get to find out a lot about camel behavior and habits. Quite amusing and exasperating creatures.

I appreciated the way the author kept the story moving as she made her trek. She left out large chunks of time where not much happened, rather than anally boring us with details. I especially liked the section where Eddie, the old Aboriginal, traveled with her for awhile. You can't help but fall in love with the guy. Traveling alone through the desert inevitably makes one introspective, but I thought even her "self-absorbed" moments contained some excellent observations about society and how and why we behave as we do in relation to the people around us.

The book is definitely more interesting after she leaves on the trip than while she's preparing for it. Robyn Davidson doesn't consider herself incredible or inspirational, although she completed a journey that few other people could have contemplated, let alone completed. I say almost, because she is visited periodically by a photographer to capture images of her journey for Robyn Davidson doesn't consider herself incredible or inspirational, although she completed a journey that few other people could have contemplated, let alone completed.

I say almost, because she is visited periodically by a photographer to capture images of her journey for National Geographic, and is accompanied by an Aboriginal elder for a part of the journey. This books is divided into four parts. The first part describes Robyn's arrival in the Alice, and her trials and tribulations around trying to get work, make money, and learn enough about camels to even consider her journey. This was difficult process for her, low paid work, sometimes on a camel station with a strange overbearing man named Kurt, who despite his shortcomings, and underhand dealings with verbal contracts, taught her a lot about camels.

After writing to them on a drunken whim, National Geographic agree to partially finance her trip in return for the story, and the photographs. This gives Robyn the final cash to purchase what she needs to make a serious start to the journey. The second part of the book covers her travelling as a trial, the first part of the trip, to Uluru Ayers Rock and on to Docker, an Aboriginal settlement.

This is a difficult time, and a steep learning curve for Robyn. It is at Docker that she meets up with Mr Eddie, the Aboriginal elder who accompanies her for a part of her journey, and shares a lot of Aboriginal knowledge with her in the third part of the book, which chronicles their journey as far as Warburton, where Eddie heads back East. The final part of the book is Robyn's final leg from Warburton to the coast. This was a fascinating read for me. As well as being an excellent story of a young woman who, despite some major misgivings about her own mental state, is driven and incredibly mentally strong; it is also a covers a lot of ground with the historic and current of the time mistreatment and human rights abuses of the Aboriginal people, as well as extolling some of their amazing culture.

As you can imagine, it is one sided commentary, but I don't doubt its accuracy. For me, the balance is all perfect. The balance between preparation and journey; the balance between the amount of history and political treatment of the Aboriginal people interspersed with the time Robyn spends with Mr Eddie and his compatriots; the balance between the authors internal thoughts and her physical journey. So in summary, no hesitation with five stars for me.

Incidentally, I happened to stumble across the film made of this story recently. Despite missing the start and the end, there were some fairly obvious rearrangements of the timelines taking some of the events of her work on the stations and experiences in learning, and showed them as part of her journey , but the story was largely authentic. View all 6 comments. Oct 22, Mel rated it it was amazing Shelves: Tracks is a cult classic, recently republished, about a woman's solo walk across miles of the Australian outback.

I learned a great deal about camels, Alice Springs Australia, the mentality of Australian men, Aborigines, and Robyn Davidson from this book. It is a book about life on the frontier, self reliance, being a woman in an ultra-macho culture, about tourism in the outback and the savage mistreatment of native peoples of the outback. One of the most interesting and to me edifying aspe Tracks is a cult classic, recently republished, about a woman's solo walk across miles of the Australian outback.

One of the most interesting and to me edifying aspects of the book was in Davidson's accounts of the treatment of Aborigines and her encounters with them. She struggled hard to see the other in people very different from her. One side of prejudice is ignorant hatred that sees the Aborigines as near sub-human completely without redeeming qualities existing only to be exploited and treated as vermin.

On the other side there are the well meaning who try to help them and to see into their culture. The first mistake is to seem them as "all alike" when they are from many tribal groups, sometimes opposed to each other. Many tribes have been forced onto lands with groups to which they have long histories of conflict. Camels were first introduced into the Australian outback early in the 19th century. Many escaped captivity and they thrived and greatly multiplied in the outback, an ideal setting for them.

I admit I never until I read tracks saw Camels as having much personality but Davidson taught me a lot about camels. They are hard to manage, very bonded to their herd, and each has their own personality. As Tracks unfolds we see a spiritual journey unfold as Davidson tries to learn the skills needed to trek the outback with Camels. Her preparations take up the first third of the book and were fascinating.

We meet a lot of interesting people in Alice Springs Alice Springs is a very touristy town where people go to experience the outback. All in all a fascinating journey and an excellent book. There is a new postscript in the Bloomsbury edition.

I highly recommend this book. Oct 17, Kristin rated it did not like it. I wanted to like this book a lot more. This book lacked a lot for me. For starters, while I appreciate her need to keep a lot of her motivations and revelations private, it makes it difficult to relate to someone on this type of journey with so little to go on.

What makes these books good is knowing why someone chose to do this type of journey, and how it changed that person. I didn't get either in this book, which made me not invested at all in the story. Also, she wro More of 1. Also, she wrote far more about her annoyances than she did her joy, which made for a lot of complaining and grumbling.

There were a lot more general observations than personal, which was unsatisfying for a personal account. A lot of readers have been left wondering why she did this journey, I was left not really caring why she did it, but wondering more why she bothered to write a book about it. Nov 13, Becky rated it liked it Shelves: I am so at a loss for this book.

I read it sandwiched between Wild by Cheryl Strayed and Mother of God by Paul Rosolie, both of which were fantastic and amazingly well written. Davidson, however, lacked the talent to write as well as the other two. The narrative style was too choppy for me, occasionally hard to follow, and random.

Tracks 2.3.0

It lacked flow the majority of the time, whereas there were other moments in which Davidson discussed her friendship with Aborigines or how the desert necessarily expa I am so at a loss for this book. I will say that. Her journey is amazing, as is the environmental destruction of the outback and the plights of the Aborigines, both things that I am thankful she discussed at length in the book.

I understand her desire to keep the motives and deeply personal lessons to herself, but I would have liked more description of her actual journey, miles only made up half of the book! I feel like most of the things that we get to know about her journey, like her annoyance with National Geographic, are superficial, superfluous, and take up space where we should have been invited into the Outback with her as the reader. Feb 02, Noreen rated it it was ok. I think what Robyn accomplished is truly amazing. I think the tasks she took on - training her camels and travelling so far across inhospitable, though amazing, country is to be more than admired.

I think the relationship she had with her camels was touching and lovely and the book was informative about them. I think the relationship she had with her dog was very much like one many of us have with our dogs and she talked about it well.


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However, I didn't enjoy Robyn herself at all. I know what sh I think what Robyn accomplished is truly amazing. I know what she did was gruelling and she was entitled to bad moods, but she was so 'down' on so much that I found it hard to get through the book, but I did. Her bringing the plight of aboriginals and the environment is to be commended and if that's what she wrote the book for, well done. In other reviews I read that people wanted to know WHY. I know she didn't want publicity during or at the end of the trek, but afterwards she wrote the book and invited it in, and the big question that people want answered is left unsaid, which I found a little disappointing.

May 18, Katherine Lika rated it it was amazing Shelves: The question I'm most commonly asked is 'why? If Tracks has a message at all, it is that one can be awake to the demand for obedience that seems natural simply because it's familiar. After watching the film Tracks twice I immediately ordered the book and promptly read it.

Something about the movie stirred a feeling a wasn't familiar with within, and that feeling continued wit The question I'm most commonly asked is 'why? Something about the movie stirred a feeling a wasn't familiar with within, and that feeling continued with the book.

This may not sound believable, but it wasn't the journey itself that led me to learning more, but Robyn Davidson herself. Portrayed in the film by the incredible Mia Wasikowska, I immediately felt connected to the desire for privacy that she craved. Not just the stay-at-home-and-binge-on-Netflix type of privacy that our society is comfortable discussing, but something that makes others uncomfortable, a privacy almost impossible now.

And in Davidson's postscript, she says something along those lines - that pure privacy is unattainable, or at least evolving into something new. But reading about her journey over thirty years ago is powerful and feels strictly modern, as is her perspective.

I had to laugh at her almost apologetic disposition when it came to describing her relationship to her dog, Diggity. If she could have only known how society would rise to find absolutely nothing strange in that kind of attachment to an animal. But in the end, my love for this transformation is because of Robyn herself. Who she was when she started, who she was after, and who she is now as she looks back on herself.

I was trying to talk to my partner about this - and I came to the conclusion that what drew me in to the book is what initially sparked my interest in the film. I saw someone I could finally relate to - with similar desires and contradictions - someone who made small steps at first, but for herself. Through reading this book I've begun to make small steps.

I've always been a big picture person, which has it's highs and lows. I'm completely at risk of sounding like a self-help dialogue - but that natural obedience we have, whether inside or outside ourselves, is easier to shirk once we see it.

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And knowing what you want doesn't have to mean taking a trek across the vast wilderness. This book has a higher rating than perhaps it deserves at face value, but it's importance to me at this time feels spectacular. Jan 29, Andrea rated it really liked it Shelves: An inspiring journey of solitude and self-discovery, which I can relate to greatly.

Because of her contempt for media and myth-making that had surrounded Davidson throughout her journey, she doesn't indulge into too many personal details. She often felt disgruntled at others as they invaded her privacy, and it shows through her writing even toward the reader. It seems that she is somewhat forced to open up this personal odyssey to prying eyes, and to conserve at least some secrets she discovered An inspiring journey of solitude and self-discovery, which I can relate to greatly.

It seems that she is somewhat forced to open up this personal odyssey to prying eyes, and to conserve at least some secrets she discovered along the way, she chooses to omit important explanations. For example, there is very little evidence to what moved her to undertake a perilous crossing of a desert by herself. The movie has a few more hints on Robyn's motivations, but the book keeps mum. Nevertheless, I really enjoyed the author's philosophical descriptions of Australian nature, the plight of indigenous population, and her relationship with the camels and the dog she took along.

Aug 13, Barbara The Bibliophage rated it liked it Shelves: Full review at TheBibliophage. When Davidson took this journey, Aboriginal Land rights had just been legislated. The world was afraid of nuclear bombs and the Cold Full review at TheBibliophage. The world was afraid of nuclear bombs and the Cold War. Women were just finding their feminist voices. And the Outback was entirely different than it is today. For that matter, so was Davidson. She was a young, idealistic, and somewhat naive woman. Having been raised on a cattle ranch as well as lived in cities, she envisioned a journey from Alice Springs to the Western coast of Australia.

Sep 19, Connie rated it really liked it Shelves: Robyn Davidson was a young woman who had a dream of traveling with camels through the bush of the northern and western areas of Australia. She arrived in Alice Springs with her dog and six dollars, hoping to find work and learn to train camels. After two years she still did not have the funds to start on her trek, so she signed a contract with "National Geographic" to allow a photographer to spend a few days with her several times during the trip.

Davidson was a hard working, tenacious woman who Robyn Davidson was a young woman who had a dream of traveling with camels through the bush of the northern and western areas of Australia. Davidson was a hard working, tenacious woman who loved the camels and her dog. She felt that she enjoyed being around animals more than people. It did occasionally make me cringe when she had to discipline the animals to keep them in line, but the camels were tricky, intelligent, and stubborn. The "camel lady" set off from Alice Springs and traveled six months through the Aboriginal Reserve areas and the desert, westward to the Indian Ocean.

Davidson tended to overreact to the presence of Rick Smolan, the camera man. The trip would not have been possible without the National Geographic sponsorship. He was also very helpful obtaining water and food for the camels so she could continue across the desert. She wanted the trip to be a personal journey, and had a hard time compromising during the three times Smolan drove out into the desert to photograph.

By the end of the trip, she valued his friendship. In addition to her interesting travel story, she also wrote about the sexism and racism that was present in s Australia.


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She was especially concerned about the treatment of the Aborigines who had been rounded up into special areas similar to the way the Native Americans were treated in North America. My favorite part of the book was when she walked with an older Pitjantjara man for several weeks, gaining a close connection with the environment.

Davidson was a daring, gutsy woman who set a goal, and although she was not the most organized person, she reached it. I enjoyed this colorful memoir set in the bush of Australia. As a young woman Robyn Davidson moved to Alice Springs with a dream of picking up some camels and heading across the desert. Of course, it just was not that easy. Although she had miles to cross, first she had to catch a camel The story of preparing for the crossing is as interesting as the crossing itself.

I remember when she was actually doing it and the great stir it caused. Reading this book is a shattering reminder of what As a young woman Robyn Davidson moved to Alice Springs with a dream of picking up some camels and heading across the desert. Reading this book is a shattering reminder of what Australia was like in the late s, particularly how misogynistic it was, and just how hard it was for Robyn Davidson to go against the mores of the times to follow her dreams.

This is an amazing story. It is often umcomfortable; both because it touches on uncomfortable subjects and because it is written in a different era with different sensibilities. It is absolutely worth reading. Perhaps I should have given this book one more star, because there were short passages of transcendent beauty when Davidson describes lovely, remote, and impossibly hostile stretches of Australian outback desert. The author trekked 1, miles with four camels and a dog, in a journey of self-exploration and transformation. Davidson has a great story, with a breathtaking backdrop, but it suffers in her telling.

Often she refers to friends as though the reader already knows them, and several times Perhaps I should have given this book one more star, because there were short passages of transcendent beauty when Davidson describes lovely, remote, and impossibly hostile stretches of Australian outback desert. So we don't really know why she is attempting this life-changing trek, only that she is, and she does her level best to take us along, only so many things that happen to her are so beyond words, that the chasm between what she wants to say and what she does say is quite wide.

Dec 20, Rochelle rated it did not like it Shelves: I quit this book about half way through after a series of references to beating her camels senseless. She is devastated after having to shoot one of her sick camels, but shows no remorse whatsoever for beating them. I have worked with animals far larger than camels and I know from personal experience that there are better ways to control them.

I couldn't keep reading this and I think some animal lovers may be uncomfortable reading this as well. It takes one adventurous and determined person to go into saltbush country and trek across the desert with four camels and live off the land. To have to face all the different dangers and obstacles along the way but at the same time understanding how very different outback Australia is. It was first published a few years after her journey in , and re-published in to accompany the recently made feature film. The autobiographical travel adventure book is inevitably inspiring, as the author's voice is as humorous and heartfelt, as it is neurotic, passionate and self-deprecating.

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There is an "Tracks" is Robyn Davidson's account of her journey from Alice Springs in the Northern Territory, to Broome in Western Australia, crossing the desert accompanied by camels and her dog. There is an authenticity and vulnerability to her writing, sometimes poetic and lyrical, at other times brutally honest, which draws the reader in. In addition to being a well-told story, Davidson's journey itself is incredible.

It is long, arduous, full of mistakes and failures and beauty, and is thus deliciously readable. One of the most affecting parts of the novel is near the end of her journey, as she comes across a beautiful oasis in the midst of the harsh environment.

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She reflects on what she has learnt over the course of her travel, "to be free is to learn, to test yourself constantly, to gamble. I had learnt to use my fears as stepping stones rather than stumbling blocks" p Her euphoria is contagious, and then she is dealt a cruel, cruel blow, which knocks the reader back as much as it does Davidson. I found this book to be incredibly engaging, honest, and exciting. I would recommend it for all women, particularly for young adults.

It is a tale of independence and real-world learning that is inspiring. Oct 07, Michael Livingston rated it it was amazing. I read this during a brief trip to Alice Springs, Uluru and surrounds having seen the movie during a characteristically chilly April day in Melbourne earlier this year. It's a stunning book - capturing Davidson's love and appreciation of the Central Australian landscape, her principles and passion for the Indigenous people of the country and her deep and abiding love of her camels and dog.

The story of the walk is perfect, covering the highs and lows of the journey and its effects on the author' I read this during a brief trip to Alice Springs, Uluru and surrounds having seen the movie during a characteristically chilly April day in Melbourne earlier this year.

The story of the walk is perfect, covering the highs and lows of the journey and its effects on the author's psyche. I loved the moment that Davidson realised that after two years spent preparing, she'd been playing at the task and that a part of her didn't really believe she'd ever do it. From there she realised that she just had to do it, that the first step was necessary and that from there stubbornness and bloody-minded persistence would make the trip happen. It's the common theme of the book - that we really can do so much more than we think and that shaking up our lives and breaking out of the comfort and security is critical to challenging ourselves and growing.

There's so much more to the book as well - it's a rich and readable journey, tackling so much more than just the walk. The movie is also brilliant and highly, highly recommended - particularly if you can see it on a biggish screen where the stunning scenery can really shine. Dec 31, Dylan rated it it was amazing Recommended to Dylan by: I'm not really fascinated by camels, but I am a sucker for stories of desert landscapes transforming human beings, and this book is a moving marriage of the two.

I found the portrayal of the way immersion in a landscape like the Australian outback can affect a person really powerful. This idea is extended from the author, who is changed by her journey, to the aboriginal people as being truly formed by the land. I've experienced just enough of this to be transformed a little myself in reading it, I'm not really fascinated by camels, but I am a sucker for stories of desert landscapes transforming human beings, and this book is a moving marriage of the two.

I've experienced just enough of this to be transformed a little myself in reading it, reminded that lightheartedness can be achieved in most situations, and nursing a longing to know my landscape in a way that I never will. Camels are the binding thread throughout the tale. They are characters in the story. While it didn't make me a camel romantic, I did enjoy getting to know some camels in detail. The struggles of the camels, woven in with the struggles of the author, make the story.

My wife, who recommended the book to me, had trouble connecting with the motivation of the author. Robyn Davidson is inexplicably driven and even maniacal, but I had no trouble accepting this. Mia Wasikowska Adam Driver. British Board of Film Classification. Retrieved 13 April Retrieved 10 October Archived from the original on 11 October Retrieved 23 May Archived from the original on 3 April Word and Film 18 December www.

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