Status
Available
Call number
Genres
Publication
Hawthorn, Vic. : Hutchinson Australia, 1988.
Description
An ancient stone creature threatens the lives of a family on a lonely sheep farm in Australia.
User reviews
LibraryThing member debnance
The Nargun isn’t happy and that’s is not good. Men are tearing up the lovely forest and the Nargun will not put up with this. A lovely ecology-minded tale from Australia.
LibraryThing member electrascaife
A recently-orphaned boy goes to live with his middle-aged cousins on their sheep ranch in the Hunter region of Australia. Coincidentally, the ranch has another new resident in the Nargun, an ancient and quite grumpy, um, boulder-like, thing.
Oh, this one is so good. So. Good. A boy exploring the
Oh, this one is so good. So. Good. A boy exploring the
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lovely nature all round him (which includes, delightfully, all sorts of creatures from Australian Aboriginal mythology), parental figures who are loving and absolutely lovable in their gruff-but-kind ways, and all of this set against the cool and relentless scariness of the Nargun. I absolutely love how the Dreamtime creatures are woven into the fabric of the surroundings in a way that makes them perfectly normal and not overly 'magical.' So, yes, a fabulous read in all sorts of ways. Show Less
Awards
CBCA Book of the Year (Winner — Book of the Year — 1974)
Australia's Greatest Books (1973)
Language
Original publication date
1973
Physical description
142 p.; 26 cm
ISBN
0091574404 / 9780091574406
Local notes
The Nargun is an ancient stone creature that can move whole mountains, and threatens the lives of a family on a lonely sheep farm in Australia.
A novel for older readers that draws on Dreamtime mythology woven into a contemporary context.
A novel for older readers that draws on Dreamtime mythology woven into a contemporary context.
Other editions
The Nargun and the Stars (Puffin Books) by Patricia Wrightson (Paperback)