How Turtle Got His Shell and Other Stories by James Vance Marshall - ISBN: 9781922077219
Paperback
Whimsical tales reveal how Australian animals and landmarks came to be.

How Turtle Got His Shell and Other Stories

$21.75

  • Paperback

    80 pages

  • Release Date

    1 May 2015

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Summary

Now in paperback.

How did turtle get his shell? Why do young koalas cling to their mothers’ backs? How was the mighty Murray River created? Ten witty retellings of legends, some of them from the Yorta Yorta people, to delight readers of all ages.

Book Details

ISBN-13:9781922077219
ISBN-10:1922077216
Author:James Vance Marshall, Francis Firebrace
Publisher:Walker Books Australia
Imprint:Walker Books Australia
Format:Paperback
Number of Pages:80
Release Date:1 May 2015
Weight:322g
Dimensions:75mm x 386mm x 47mm
What They're Saying

Critics Review

This collection of Dreamtime Myths, legends and folklore is amazing. The content focuses on the environment and nature, and how important it is to care for the earth and waterways. The stories are written in a way that will inspire children to focus on caring for our world, while they simultaneously learn the legends of our Indigenous people. * Buzzwords Magazine *

About The Author

James Vance Marshall

James Vance Marshall is also published under the names Ian Cameron and Donald Payne. His most famous book, Walkabout, was first published as The Children, and was later made into a movie by the director Nicholas Roeg. His other books include A River Ran Out of Eden, The Lost Ones (dramatised by Disney as The Island at the Top of the World) and White-Out. He lives in Dorking, Surrey.

Francis Firebrace grew up in the Australian bush where he would travel by horse and cart and follow the banks of the Murray-Darling Basin. He began his school education at the age of 7, but left seven years later and started work as a sheep and cattle stockman. At the age of 29 he moved to Canberra to begin a new chapter in his life – to become a film maker. Francis has had some success within the film industry as 5 of his films are in the national film archives in Canberra and won in 1976 the International Moomba top 10 award, which was awarded to his film “Give my regards to the Devil”. While living in the Whitsundays Islands from 1984 to the 90’s he began telling his own stories to tourist. These stories took him on a new journey that saw him travelling from country to country. He currently lives in England.

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