The Giant Devil Dingo Explained

The Giant Devil Dingo
Author:Dick Roughsey
Illustrator:Dick Roughsey
Cover Artist:Dick Roughsey
Country:Australia
Language:English
Subject:Aboriginal Australians - Folklore. Legends - Queensland - Cape York Peninsula. Dingo - Folklore.
Genre:children, legends
Publisher:Collins, Sydney
Release Date:1973
Pages:34 (Hardback)
Isbn:0-17-006470-0

The Giant Devil Dingo (1973) is a picture book for children by Dick Roughsey. It describes how the dreamtime devil-dingo, Gaiya, of lower Cape York Peninsula mythology was reborn and domesticated to become man's friend and helper.

Artwork from the book is held by the National Museum of Australia.[1]

Reception

Kirkus Reviews wrote "The appendix might better have been a preface ... But the chase and basic situation (in Europe the hungry pursuers would be a witch and her familiar) are as easy to grasp as the peculiarly Australian flavor is authentic. And despite the sameness of the scenes—repetitive in scale, perspective and color—Roughsey's flat, clay colored paintings (with dabs of green for foliage) are the more effective for their amateur look—especially where that huge-tongued, red-eyed dingo opposes the small, faceless, dimly differentiated humans."[2] while The Aboriginal Child at School called it "a highly successful book."[3] The Giant Devil Dingo has also been reviewed by The Sydney Morning Herald and Reading Time.[4] The book was selected for the 2010 NSW Premier's Reading Challenge,[5] and was commended in the 1974 Children's Book Council of Australia awards for Children's Picture Book of the Year.[6]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Painting no. 12, Giant Devil-Dingo Series by Dick Roughsey - The people cutting up Gaiya. . www.nma.gov.au . National Museum of Australia . 16 June 2016.
  2. Web site: The Giant Devil-Dingo. www.kirkusreviews.com . Kirkus Media LLC . 16 June 2016.
  3. April 1974 . Book Reviews . The Aboriginal Child at School . Cambridge University Press . 2 . 2 . 58–59 . 16 June 2016.
  4. Web site: The Giant Devil Dingo . www.austlit.edu.au . AustLit . 16 June 2016.
  5. Web site: NSW Premier's Reading Challenge 2010. 30 November 2009.
  6. Web site: The Children's Book Council of Australia, Winners and Commended Books, 1974. . 30 November 2009 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20141216052001/http://cbca.org.au/7079.htm . 16 December 2014.