In her flat above Drylands' newsagency, Janet Deakin is writing a book
for the world's last reader. Little has changed in her 50 years, except
for the coming of cable TV. Loneliness is almost a religion, and still
everyone knows your business.
But the town is being outmanoeuvred by drought and begins to empty,
pouring itself out like water into sand. Small minds shrink even smaller
in the vastness of the land. One man is forced out by council rates and
bigotry; another sells his property, risking the lot to build his dream.
And all of them are shadowed by violence of some sort--these people
whose only victory over the town is in leaving it.