The Shack That Dad Built: Little Hare Books
By (Author) Elaine Russell
Hardie Grant Children's Publishing
Little Hare
27th July 2005
Australia
Primary and Secondary Educational
Fiction
A823.4
Paperback
32
Width 230mm, Height 273mm
172g
Our shack had a dirt floor, and before I swept it I would sprinkle water on it so the dust didn't fly everywhere. Then Mum would put an old piece of lino down. I thought it looked lovely! When Elaine Russell was five, her dad built the family a shack just outside the Aboriginal mission at La Perouse in Sydney. In The Shack that Dad Built, Elaine illustrates what life was like for an indigenous kid on the urban fringes. Her recollections range from the happy memories of hide-and-seek in the sand dunes and hunting for bush tucker to more bittersweet memories, such as her "Saddest Christmas Ever" (when the charity responsible for distributing presents to the local Aboriginal kids ran out of toys just as Elaine reached the head of the queue). Elaine's colourful, painterly illustrations vividly recreate these childhood experiences.
Elaine Russell was born in Tingha, northern New South Wales, in 1941. She spent most of her childhood on the Aboriginal mission at Lake Cargelligo, where her father was a handyman. In 1993, Elaine enrolled in a visual arts course and was finally able to realise her lifelong ambition to be a painter. Her work has been displayed - and is held by - museums and galleries around the world. Elaines first book, A is for Aunty (ABC Books, 2000), was shortlisted for the Picture Book Award in the 2001 Childrens Book Council of Australia Awards, and was an Eve Pownall Information Book Honour Book.