''A Mother's Offering'', which predates subsequent Australian literature for the young by a decade, reflecting the importance of family conversation to education in the home in the nineteenth century, and follows the pattern of literature by
Jean-Jacques Rousseau in its expository question-and-answer format concluding in pious moralising. It is not a dull tract however; Charlotte drew on her own experiences in the colony, and probably on actual conversations with her children, in preparing a stimulating, often exciting text that presents children with local adventures and Australian heroes for the first time. It is an excellent example of the influence women had on the community through the education of their children, though the children's questions and reactions are gendered; Clara being interested in botany and Julius in hunting. The book covers a variety of topics, from natural history, often as an example for human morality, to geology, shipwrecks and the customs of the
Australian Aborigines. Some parts are quite lurid, such as her description of the wreck of the
Charles Eaton, a ship that went down in the
Torres Strait in 1834. It was claimed that many children survived the shipwreck only to be eaten by cannibals. She describes Aboriginal 'monsters' and their 'wanton barbarities' in her ''A Mother's Offering'' account of shipwrecked
Eliza Fraser's treatment, which she explains is a result of Islanders and aborigines being more prone to 'unrestrained passions' than the British. Life's dangers were a frequent theme of 19th-century Australian children's fiction. And yet there is scientific understanding evident in her accounting for explosions heard in the bush 'as loud as cannon' with reference to theories of Sir
John Herschel. The book was published by
George William Evans (1780–1852), a surveyor who had arrived in Port Jackson in 1802. He led the expedition which crossed the
Great Dividing Range in 1813. He returned to England in 1826 but came back to Australia in 1832 and set up as a bookseller and stationer. == As a collector's item ==