Stuart's first novel,
Yandy, was published to critical acclaim in 1959. It became a modest best seller and was studied at the high school level in some Australian school systems. The events take place against the background of the
1946 Pilbara strike. The book was to set the tone for others that followed, causing literary critic
Adam Shoemaker to write: "Donald Stuart probably comes the closest of any White Australian writer during this period to a sensitive depiction of the Aboriginal people as Aboriginal human beings."
Yandy was followed by a series of novels featuring
Aboriginal Australians as main characters. In
Ilbarana and
Malloonkai, Stuart attempts to view the world from the Aboriginal point of view, making him one of the few Australian writers, along with anthropologists such as
T. G. H. Strehlow,
Charles Pearcy Mountford,
Ronald Berndt and
Catherine Berndt, to even attempt to come close to a personal knowledge of Aboriginal people. In 1974, Stuart published the first book in what would become the series known as ''The Conjuror's Years
. Prince of My Country'' recounts the story of an Aboriginal station owner who makes a success of running his business, against all odds. This was set at a time when
Aboriginal people were not allowed to vote, and they were little known for their skill as entrepreneurs. The next book is also pre-war, with the last four books mainly dealing with the war years, and especially the time spent on the Burma–Thailand railway. ==Death==