Black Sheep: Journey to Borroloola


Memoir
Originally published by Profile Books (2002) and Hardie Grant Books (2002)
Published by Allen & Unwin (2012)

Shortlisted for The Age Book of the Year 2003 (Non fiction)

โ€˜I was a child when I first heard of him โ€ฆ
There was a photograph of an old man with a prophetโ€™s beard and funny clothes standing outside an odd corrugated-iron dwelling in the middle of nowhere. Roger Jose lived with his Aboriginal wife in an upside-down water tank in a place called Borroloola. He used to push her along in a wheelbarrow because she was too fat to walk. He was about as far beyond the pale as you could go โ€ฆ โ€œliving blackfellaโ€ in a policemanโ€™s disapproving words.โ€™

This highly original book โ€“ history, travel book, memoir, quest โ€“ sets out to discover Roger Jose, perhaps a distant relative, and his life in a remote Aboriginal community on Australiaโ€™s farthest shore, reading world literature and evolving his own radical philosophy. Rogerโ€™s chosen motto, still pinned up in Borroloola, was โ€˜Manโ€™s greatness is the fewness of his needs.โ€™ In his journey through the Gulf of Carpentaria searching for Roger, Nicholas Jose also met a young Gangalidda man, Murrandoo Yanner, representative of some of the most deprived Aboriginal communities in Australia who has committed himself to fighting for his peopleโ€™s rights in their vast and beautiful traditional territory.

This book is the absorbing response of a modern writer to his own heritage.