James moved to Australia in 1966. One year later she travelled to the Top End for a two-week holiday. When her car broke down on the way home, she returned to Darwin and never left. James said later that Darwin “seduced me immediately”. She lived in Nightcliff and Fannie Bay marrying Darwin solicitor Geoff James in 1968. She initially worked at the
Northern Territory News under editor Jim Bowditch. James followed up with freelance work at the ABC. James was on night duty in the ABC newsroom when
Cyclone Tracy struck Darwin in December 1974. She was evacuated shortly after. She became involved in citizen's groups actively liaising with Darwin residents as a community consultant for the then Department of Urban and Regional Development, the Australian Council of Social Services, the Cities Commission and the Environment Centre in Darwin for which she was the executive officer for four years. She was bed-ridden for nearly a year, after falling from a camel in 1981 in Alice Springs. She then worked as a journalist for the
Darwin Star but left in 1981 to focus on oral history interviews. In 1982, her marriage with Geoff James ended and she sharpened her focus on historical writing. She then worked as a project administrator for the National Trust, a member of CSIRO NT and later a ministerial/press officer for Senator Bob Collins, then Leader of the Territory Opposition and the Parliamentary Labor Party in the NT. James also worked for Chief Minister of the Northern Territory Clare Martin, and is credited for persuading her to enter politics. Her best known work ''No Man's Land: Women of the Northern Territory'' was published in 1989 and quickly became a best-seller. The book was later developed into a play. She won a number of awards including the 2001 NT Heritage Award, the 2000 NT Literary Essay Award and the Chief Minister's Women's Achievement Award in 1999. ==Later life==