Garimara's
Follow the Rabbit-Proof Fence is considered a powerful description of the abuses endured by the Stolen Generations. The book was made into an internationally successful
film in 2002, directed by
Phillip Noyce. Her follow-up book,
Under the Wintamarra Tree, details her own life at
Moore River and at the
Roelands Native Mission and how she managed to escape by enrolling in a nursing school.
Home to Mother is her children's edition of
Follow the Rabbit Proof Fence. In the four books, ''Caprice, a Stockman's Daughter
, Follow the Rabbit-proof Fence
, Home to Mother
, and Under the Wintamarra Tree'', Pilkington documented three generations of women in her family. In 1990, Pilkington's book ''Caprice: A Stockman's Daughter'', the first of the trilogy, won the
Queensland Premier's Literary Awards' Unpublished Indigenous Writer – The
David Unaipon Award. She was appointed co-patron of Australia's State and Federal Sorry Day committee's Journey of Healing in 2002. In May 2008, she was awarded the $50,000
Red Ochre Award which is made to an indigenous artist for their outstanding, lifelong contribution to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander arts at home and abroad. ==Death==