Published in Overland Issue 225 Summer 2016 · Fair Australia Prize Member winner: cards Tomas Lambe near the sheep-strewn town where i was weaned, three surnames own thousands of gum-speckled acres. a blue-eyed blonde boy was my best mate. the majestic high-ceilinged homestead always cool in summer heat wide hallway cavernous pool room lawn tennis-court sculpted gardens etcetera where he resided stood against the old squatters’ cottage made of mud stones & sticks which grew into my family home. he was & remains a warm good-natured bloke like his father entitled without imperiousness. were they better farmers, harder workers than us. did they deserve their 4000 acres while we warranted 40 because instead of being a WWI infantry man inheriting a few rocky acres of land as pension for service my friend’s father’s grandfather happened to be surveyor for Angas one of those serious sepia-coloured big-sideburned men who divvied the state giving swathes to mates arrogantly ignoring millennia of occupation & ensuring the deck would remain stacked for generations Read the rest of Overland 225 If you enjoyed this, buy the issue Or subscribe and receive four outstanding issues for a year Tomas Lambe Tomas Lambe is a member of the dandylion collective based in Adelaide. During the 2016 Australian election campaign he wrote a political poem a day on his blog caretaker mode. More by Tomas Lambe › Overland is a not-for-profit magazine with a proud history of supporting writers, and publishing ideas and voices often excluded from other places. If you like this piece, or support Overland’s work in general, please subscribe or donate. Related articles & Essays 4 December 201919 December 2019 · Prizes Fair Australia Prize 2019: the winners Editorial team Announcing the final results for the ten categories of the 2019 Fair Australia Prize. Hearty congratulations to all! 13 November 201919 December 2019 · Announcement Fair Australia Prize 2019: the shortlists Editorial team We are pleased to announce the shortlists for the ten categories of the 2019 Fair Australia Prize.