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Tasmania (Trowena) 1830 Identical twins Sonni and Bobbi are having the time of their lives. They are the youngest of a family of six and their parents are at an afternoon ceremony being held at the top of a thickly treed hill close by. On that day, their normal day's playtime is shattered when the twins see the rumored Ghosts for the first time. Right then, their slow-living harmonious lives began to change speed forever. As within the nature of their Mother, they will adapt or die underfoot. The very flexible Fethafoot - Gyor-bun - is sent from Uluru to Trowena, where he discovers that even…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Tasmania (Trowena) 1830 Identical twins Sonni and Bobbi are having the time of their lives. They are the youngest of a family of six and their parents are at an afternoon ceremony being held at the top of a thickly treed hill close by. On that day, their normal day's playtime is shattered when the twins see the rumored Ghosts for the first time. Right then, their slow-living harmonious lives began to change speed forever. As within the nature of their Mother, they will adapt or die underfoot. The very flexible Fethafoot - Gyor-bun - is sent from Uluru to Trowena, where he discovers that even after horrendous calamity and loss of life - as in Nature - there always follows rebirth and new life.
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Autorenporträt
Pemulwuy Weeatunga is the pen name John M Wenitong chose for the Fethafoot Chronicles series. Born in Gladstone, Queensland, Australia, John is an indigenous Australian man of Kabi Kabi Aboriginal and South-Sea Island origin. His Australian indigenous mob is caretakers of the mainland area from approximately the Fraser to Moreton Islands area of the SE-Queensland coastline. John's mother - Aunty Lorna Wenitong - started the first Aboriginal Health Program out of Mt Isa in the late 1960s and his younger brother, Mark, one of the first indigenous Doctors in Queensland, is credited with being the mind behind AIDA in Australia. John, now in his early sixties, has four children aged from their teens to their late thirties, and six wonderful grandchildren. He plays guitar, photographs nature, writes poetry and songs, and occasionally tries to sing.