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Booth, Norman W (2002)
Up The Dusty Track
Darwin: NTU Press, RRP A$33.00
In February 1942, with the bombing of Darwin by the Japanese, Australians
at last awoke to the peril that was menacing them. Alice Springs, a small
town in Central Australia, was invaded by convoy drivers, who carried
to the North materials of war from factories in the South. But the convoy
trucks were wrecks, and there were no spare parts. Drivers, fitters and
mechanics toiled day and night. Nerves frayed. Sometimes drivers, drugged
with fatigue, fell asleep and overturned the trucks.
This novel tells the story of the grim challenging position in the early
months of 1942, when Sergeant Sandy Duncan and his men drove their crazy
trucks 'Up the Dusty Track'. The story revolves around Sergeant Duncan,
who is responsible for keeping the convoy running. He faces numerous difficulties,
from the shortages of tyres and equipment, to dealing with the diverse
individuals who form part of the platoon. Their exploits and the resolution
of personal conflicts are a principal part of the story of Duncan's convoy.
This is a war novel with a difference. There are no great fights. But
there are daily battles against appalling conditions and equipment, in
a race against time to carry troops and supplies to the North by the only
route possible - overland, through harsh, sparsely populated territory.
The war is seen through the eyes of various characters forming part of
the convoy up the rapidly constructed track from Alice Springs to Larrimah.
The characters are a hard-bitten lot. Their lives are punctuated by broken
springs, leaking fuel tanks, and occasional fires, and are lived against
a background of searing heat and blinding dust, but also of great beauty.
Their conversation is of the difficulties they encounter in a day's work,
the families they have left behind, the Aboriginal women, and the political
and economic arrangements of a world that is far from sane.
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