Henry Lawson epitomised the weather-beaten laconic when he said: ‘Death is about the only cheerful thing in the bush.’ A century later, Bill Bryson, in Down Under (2000), picked up where Lawson left off: he defined the ‘real Australia’ as places where ‘no sane person would choose to live’. Somewhere in between, Patrick White created one of those dubious entities, a sweat-stained e ... (read more)