Striking and Searing: Read an Extract from Not Quite White in the Head by Melissa Lucashenko

Striking and Searing: Read an Extract from Not Quite White in the Head by Melissa Lucashenko

I was having an extended break from writing. After four novels, I’d turned aside to put my heart and soul into a property near Billinudgel on Bundjalung Country in Northern New South Wales. (That property later became the setting for my novel Mullumbimby – literally another story.) Somewhat to my surprise, Professor Julianne Schultz, the brilliant founding editor of Griffith Review, rang me up with a proposal. I agreed and took time out from eradicating camphor laurels and ripping down rusty barbed wire fences to fly up to Palm Island. There, my kinship sister Gladys introduced me to one of her senior Elders, and at that Elder’s kitchen table I learned about life for Bwgcolman people in the aftermath of the killing in custody of Mulrunji Doomadgee. Six months later, Griffith Review published ‘Who Let the Dogs Out?’ 

Fast forward two decades, and as this book goes to print yet another Aboriginal man, Kumanjayi White, has just met his death in police custody. Kumanjayi, a Warlpiri man living in town due to his disabilities, died after being held down on an Alice Springs supermarket floor by two off-duty police. Frail, thin and, according to one former supermarket worker, clearly someone living with disability, Kumanjayi had allegedly been pinching chocolates. Between the killing of Mulrunji Doomadgee and the death of Kumanjayi White, hundreds of other Indigenous men, (women and children have died in the custody of the Australian state. As one Koori community member asked angrily of the prison system while at a rally for another victim, the late David Dungay Jr: ‘How much training do they need to stop killing our people?’ A question worth repeating, again and again, until it’s answered, and until the killings cease. This pattern of lethal state violence towards Blak people (the term ‘Blak’ coined by the late artist Destiny Deacon, who began spelling the word without the ‘c’ because, she said, she was sick and tired of being called ‘a Black c …’) seems so deeply entrenched in Australia as to be inevitable. It isn’t inevitable. We First Nations lived here successfully and fruitfully for thousands of years, and we can do so again. 

As I write in ‘Staying White’ – the most recent of these essays – Australia can join us in a better future. You don’t need to be Indigenous to engage with First Nations mobs and our ancient, sustainable Law in the twenty-first century. You simply need to be a decent, mindful human who cares about your neighbours and the earth, and acts accordingly…

Continue reading the extract here.

Buy a copy of Not Quite White in the Head here.

Reviews

An Eye-Opening Masterpiece: Read Our Review of Not Quite White in the Head by Melissa Lucashenko

Review | Our Review

3 November 2025

An Eye-Opening Masterpiece: Read Our Review of Not Quite White in the Head by Melissa Lucashenko

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      Publisher details

      Not Quite White in the Head
      Author
      Melissa Lucashenko
      Publisher
      University of Queensland Press
      Genre
      Non Fiction
      Released
      04 November, 2025
      ISBN
      9780702271144

      Synopsis

      Melissa Lucashenko is one of our most admired and awarded novelists. She is renowned for writing about ordinary Australians and the extraordinary lives they lead.

      This timely collection of essays and journalism - published together for the first time - spans two turbulent decades. With her trademark wit and wisdom, Lucashenko reflects on being caught in a siege, on the marginalised lives of prisoners and the urban poor, on Blak identity, Australian literature and on meeting her writing idol. Her non-fiction, like her novels, is deeply engaged with politics, activism, culture and social (in)justice.

      Not Quite White in the Head offers unprecedented access to one of the nation's greatest writers as she invites us into the conversations that truly matter.
      Melissa Lucashenko
      About the author

      Melissa Lucashenko

      Melissa Lucashenko is a Goorie author of Bundjalung and European heritage. She has been publishing books with UQP since 1997, with her first novel, Steam Pigs, winning the Dobbie Literary Award and shortlisted for the NSW Premier’s Literary Awards and regional Commonwealth Writers’ Prize. Hard Yards (1999) was shortlisted for the Courier-Mail Book of the Year and the NSW Premier’s Literary Awards, and Mullumbimby (2013) won the Queensland Literary Award and was longlisted for the Stella Prize, the Miles Franklin Literary Award and the Kibble Literary Award. She has also written two novels for teenagers, Killing Darcy (UQP, 1998) and Too Flash (IAD Press, 2002). In 2013 Melissa won the inaugural long-form Walkley Award for her Griffith REVIEW essay ‘Sinking Below Sight: Down and Out in Brisbane and Logan’.

      Books by Melissa Lucashenko

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      1. Conservatist says:

        Thanks. This was really exciting read. Will you write anything about Conservatist ?