Here is a book of thirty-three Australian Aboriginal Stories from the Dreaming told by storytellers Pauline McLeod, June Barker and Francis Firebrace Jones to Helen McKay. Gadi Mirrabooka from the World Series on Folklore published by Libraries Unlimited. ISBN 9781563089237 and 1563089238
Australian Aboriginal Stories in Gadi Mirrabooka contain many life lessons useful in and out of school classrooms.
Read the overview of Australia, containing the geography – from an Aboriginal perspective. Understand more of the Aboriginal people, their customs – such as the totemic system – and the Aboriginal art forms of art, music and dance.
Journey into the Dreamtime, with authentic stories, told by three Aboriginal storyteller custodians. Through these stories from the Dreaming – the mystical period of Aboriginal beginning – learn about Aboriginal belief systems, moral behaviour, customs and values, survival, hunting and gathering skills, and animal psychology.
Discover: Why the Kookaburra Laughs, How the Birds got Their Colours and How the Emu Lost its Wings.
Read the stories of: The First Platypus, How the Kangaroo Got Her Pouch and The Beginning Island – a Creation story from the First time, when Tasmania was born. There’s even a space story: The Min Min Light from Northwestern New South Wales!
Familiarise yourself with the thirty-three fascinating stories of the Australian Aboriginal Dreamtime, included in this book. Read them often to your children.
This collection of Aboriginal stories, can be enjoyed by people of all ages, and at all levels of understanding.
Reviewers include:
Dr Gwenda Beed Davey, Honorary Research Associate, National Centre for Australian Studies, Monash University, Melbourne, says of Gadi Mirrabooka: ‘This is one of the most interesting and varied collections of Aboriginal stories I have seen. The stories have the unmistakable stamp of authenticity and offer a great variety in themes and levels of complexity.”
Dr Margaret Read MacDonald, an Author, Storyteller and Folklorist, based in Kirkland, Washington, says of Gadi Mirrabooka : ‘At last we have a collection of Aboriginal tales, we may use with the blessing of the elders. An amazing book ‒ and a great resource. You did a great service to the world, by preserving those wonderful Aboriginal stories and making them available to a wider audience in your book, Gadi Mirrabooka.
Jacky Clarke, Teacher, I am the lucky teacher of a Year 3/4 class, here in Perth and I am really looking forward to using this beautiful book, Gadi Mirrabooka, within my theme of “Traditional Stories.”
See more reviews at:
Good Reads
Gadi Mirrabooka is available at:
www.gadimirrabooka.com
Or at:
www.templebooks.com