Like most people, I suspect, I was stunned and quite amazed to hear the story of a dingo cub landing in a back yard in Wandiligong in northeast Victoria, probably dropped by an eagle. One wonders from what height it fell. It can't have been very high at all for it to have landed without any broken bones or internal injuries.
I can imagine the eagle struggling to take off with its heavy load, then becoming more and more tired, sinking lower and lower, until it finally let go of it precious prize completely. I am currently reading a wonderful book about Australia's birds of prey, written by David Hollands, and can see how this story could be written from the eagle's point of view.
Like many people, again, I was heartened to hear that alpine dingoes still exist. I wonder at what altitude they mostly congregate. They must have taken a dreadful hammering from all the fires up there in the last twenty years or so.
That said, the story is pretty thin for a novel. It crossed my mind some time ago to try to turn this story into a book, but I had other projects on the go, and it sounded like quite a challenge. That said, I'm pretty sure that Favel Parrett has made a much better fist of it than I would have.
It is heartening to read a book about talking animals. I attended a workshop on writing picture books in the 1990s where the convenor made it clear that, at least as far as he was concerned, talking animals were OUT. It did disconcert me a little, though, to discover that this little dingo had a perfect understanding of spoken English from the word go.
The text leans a little towards education at the expense of entertainment at times, but it would be hard not to do that in a book of this nature. It is beautifully presented with a thick, luscious hard cover, wonderful black and white sketches at the start of every chapter, and lots of white space.
This is a book for children and, as an adult, I am not a member of its target audience. Nevertheless, I enjoyed reading it. 'Wandi' has done a lot to raise my awareness of the alpine dingo, and I look forward to learning more about them.