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The Fethafoot Chronicles Book 6 Australia, around 2014BP It is the time of the great games of prowess - managed by the Kabi Kabi people of southeast Queensland. Jundabara - the Fethafoot warrior from FfC 3: The Contest - is attending the significant event with his growing son Wogwun, and his practical, often short-tempered wife Niyola. Both adults have entered one of the demanding physical contests and local kin are looking forward to the events. Between the various rough and ready competitions, including a game of full-contact Burionjin with the huge hairy-man Grok; and being surreptitiously…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
The Fethafoot Chronicles Book 6 Australia, around 2014BP It is the time of the great games of prowess - managed by the Kabi Kabi people of southeast Queensland. Jundabara - the Fethafoot warrior from FfC 3: The Contest - is attending the significant event with his growing son Wogwun, and his practical, often short-tempered wife Niyola. Both adults have entered one of the demanding physical contests and local kin are looking forward to the events. Between the various rough and ready competitions, including a game of full-contact Burionjin with the huge hairy-man Grok; and being surreptitiously attacked by his tiniest enemy ever - Jundabara knows that he will need every bit of training and patience to keep the peace and see his own small family group safely through the great event.
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.