Jane, age 13, and her brother Bobby, age 11, go with their cousin Vincent, age 15, to ride the boundary fence of their family’s property in the wild and rough country of central New South Wales. Their job is to check the fence for breaks, fix what simple things they can, and mark the places that need more extensive repairs. The job will take several days, and the three young people are excited to be entrusted with such a responsibility and given freedom to camp and ride on their own for up to a week.
Of course, trouble overtakes the trio, both unavoidable trouble and some of their own making. The central character and theme of the story are Bobby and his emergence into leadership and maturity over the course of the children’s adventure. Bobby, who grows up to become Robert by the end of the book, is “thin, freckled, and silent”, “not a boy that motherly ladies longed to cuddle, nor had he ever been.” His gaze is described as “remote and calculating”, and he is said to be “accustomed to working out his own problems”, “not ungenerous and no fool.”
Vincent and Jane, on the other hand, are more gregarious, cheerful, and friendly. They are the sort of children, or teens, that adults trust, and Jane looks up to Vincent with a sort of hero-worship that she could never give to her younger brother. It was fascinating and quite true-to-life to see how the dynamics between these three change over the course of their very dangerous and challenging adventure in the wild outback of Australia.
I have read several other children’s books by Australian authors, set in Australia, or said to be characteristic of Australian children’s literature:
- Playing Beattie Bow by Ruth Park
- Red Sand, Blue Sky by Cathy Applegate
- Walkabout by James Vance Marshall
- Ash Road by Ivan Southall
- Hill’s End by Ivan Southall
- The Nargun and the Stars by Patricia Wrightson
- Storm Boy by Colin Thiele
I can recommend all of the above books. But from now on for children or adults who are asking for one book set in Australia to give them a taste of that continent and country, I will be recommending The Boundary Riders. I would like to read more of Ms Phipson’s books, especially her two books Good Luck to the Rider and The Family Conspiracy, both of which won the Australian Children’s Book of the Year Award. Maybe those will become go-to recommendations as well.