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Back of beyond

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On cover -- "One woman's remarkable story of love, adventure, disasters and wonderful times in the Gulf Country".

At twenty-two, Jenny fell in love with Rick Old and went to live and work with him on his property, McAllister, in the Gulf of Carpentaria. There, she faced incredible hardship, living in a hut with not even basic necessities. Her only contact with the outside world was a two-way radio. In this vast empty landscape, she battled drought, flood, fire, and cyclones. For eighteen years she and Rick struggled to stay on in the Gulf, eventually triumphantly turning McAllister into a thriving oasis. This extraordinary story of one indomitable Australian woman is told in her own words with skill and humour. A story of the bush people and their generosity, filled with wonderful characters. Most of all, the story of one woman's love for her man and the adventure it took her on. McAllister, the story of Jenny Old's amazing life in the outback, will captivate and enthrall.

390 pages, Paperback

Published January 1, 2018

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Jenny Old

3 books7 followers

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5 stars
103 (53%)
4 stars
67 (34%)
3 stars
18 (9%)
2 stars
1 (<1%)
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3 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 11 of 11 reviews
Profile Image for Roxanne Parker.
19 reviews
September 15, 2018
This book was absolutely inspiring. The journey that Jenny and her family have gone on was mesmerising and engaging. I finished the book within a week and was thinking about it constantly.
I can vividly imagine life in the wilds of the Gulf country during the 70s and 80s, with Jenny’s beautiful and detailed descriptions painting an awesome picture of life in the bush.
Highly recommended to anyone who loves a story of adventure, strong female leads and a gorgeous Australian story!
Profile Image for Rhonda Valentine.
Author 1 book3 followers
August 17, 2020

This memoir, initially entitled McAllister, was first independently published by Ocean Reeve Publishing and marketed widely in Australia by its author. Its enthusiastic response prompted Allen & Unwin to seek to republish and market to an international audience. With the intention of attracting American readers it was reintroduced with a new look and title, Back of Beyond. The author’s home photos again adorned the cover, but designer Rovina Panetta arranged the pictures in a way that spoke more of the outback that Americans could envisage than the previous version which displayed a personal snapshot of the author’s life.
It is some way into the book before the owners of the McAllister station are revealed. I confess that until I realised it was owned by shareholders, I wondered how three very young people could acquire a sizeable chunk of Australia’s Gulf country. Despite their youth, to work a cattle station was clearly an opportunity that Rick Old and his equally enthusiastic friend Paul Williams could not pass up. It was into this mix that Rick’s girlfriend, Jenny Bull arrived in 1969.
From their first months in a small shed with wings propped up on one side, to the years in the self-sustaining outback homestead they created, this story is one of resilience, optimism and the ardent enthusiasm of youth.
Jenny Old has written in an easy conversational style with every page documenting the adversities of the cattle business, joys in the friendships forged, and elements battled in this amazing wide brown land. Jenny had her babies, raised domestic animals, an orchard and kitchen garden, nurtured an oasis of lawns, shrubs and flowers around a house she and Rick had created themselves out of mud bricks. When she wasn’t doing all that, she was hostess to a steady succession of jillaroos, stockmen and guests who were invited or invited themselves for work or business or simply out of curiosity. Somewhere in there the Old’s also welcomed family who generously reminded them they were loved beyond McAllister.
Then there was the stock. A motely lot of various breeds to begin with, eventually they ran 5,000 head of Brahman cattle on 234 square miles of the outback. Jenny, who’d grown up on a farm in New South Wales, honed her skills as a musterer and fencer working beside the men in the harshest of conditions. A sincere compliment about her capabilities from an Aboriginal stockman was the ultimate proof of her worth. In the early seventies when the bottom fell out of the beef business, the Olds had to diversify – they built a road house at the junction of four of the old beef roads and borrowed money to buy the McAllister shareholders out. Assuming the debt themselves saved the worry of the others being inconvenienced – and yet, now deeply in debt, their boundless enthusiasm prevailed.
This is not just a wonderful memoir, but a slice of Australian history that shares stories of the beef industry and weather events, the resilience of youth and the cooperation between hardy people living in extraordinary conditions. And it’s a testament to the love of country.
I highly recommend this book and look forward to reading its prequel – Innocent Nurses Abroad which documents Jenny’s life before her adventures in the Gulf country.
Rhonda Valentine Dixon
Profile Image for Leah.
55 reviews2 followers
April 25, 2019
This was a brilliant read! I experienced a lot of joy reading this book. It came from imagining Jenny's life as well as having awakened memories of my own life living in Mt Isa and other outback QLD towns as a child. It was good to remember the hospitality of station owners and the amazing big hearted neighbours that surrounded them. It was good to remember the incredible hard work that it takes to keep a station going that I too often forget as I eat what other's hard labor has grown or raised for me.
This story is very descriptive and in my mind's eye I could see the red dust and smell the rain as it approached. The author did not just write about her own experiences, but introduced us to all who were in her life at that moment.
As we are taken through Jenny's life, it feels like I was invited to sit at her kitchen table and drink tea while she chatted casually about stuff. This book is a casual chat to the reader, with moments of a heart to heart, moments of laughter and most certainly moments of wonder.
Profile Image for Melanie T.
54 reviews1 follower
January 19, 2021
Enjoyed the book very much. I was a student nurse in Mt Isa in the early 1980s . Jenny's experiences in the Gulf country resonated with me as many places mentioned I have known. Her difficulties in correspondence schooling was interesting too as I worked as a governess for a while in western Queensland before going nursing. All bush women deserve far greater recognition than they get.
40 reviews
October 1, 2018
If you love the Australian bush, you will love this book. It is enchanting; a true life story by a true pioneer. Written with great skill and warmth. Very easy to read and very enjoyable. Very highly recommended.
Profile Image for Carofish.
541 reviews1 follower
January 12, 2021
This is a fascinating story of a young couple starting out in the Gulf Country. Jenny tells it with humour and her descriptions are vivid. I couldn’t put it down because I had to know how it all worked out. I felt her sadness at leaving her beautiful home.
132 reviews
October 15, 2021
very enjoyable and entertaining. Certainly makes you admire how hard this woman worked - cooking for all the workers, doing stock work all while pregnant. Also made you appreciate how this couple turned nothing to something and the wonderful comraderie of the people in the gulf.
27 reviews
April 11, 2024
A wonderful true story of life in remote Queensland under oppressive conditions. It provided many examples of people overcoming hardship and becoming more resilient and capable as a result. Would be a great learning read for today's younger generation.
Profile Image for Leanne.
95 reviews2 followers
June 30, 2019
I really interesting diary of a young family and their establishment of a cattle station in the Gulf country.
A great reflection on the hardships of the modern day Aussie pioneer.
Profile Image for Deb Kingston .
365 reviews
March 30, 2020
3.5 stars 🌟 It was an interesting read and enjoyed Jenny’s humour and optimism.
30 reviews
March 13, 2025
I have re-read this book quite a few times. It is a great book, quite often funny, about Jenny Old's life in Outback Australia.
Displaying 1 - 11 of 11 reviews

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