The book is centered around a British writer named "Bruce" who travels to
Alice Springs, Australia, to join a
land surveyor mapping the location of
a proposed 1,500 Kilometre railway line to be constructed from Alice Springs to
Darwin, Australia. Specifically, the narrator befriends "Arkady," a local who is tasked by the rail company with conferring with local Aboriginals to understand which landscapes are considered sacred in Aboriginal culture and thus should be avoided. Arkady, Bruce and a group of Aboriginal locals travel in a
Toyota Land Cruiser through
Outback Australia, and the first half of the book chronicles these various encounters. Bruce eventually becomes stranded in a small, remote Aboriginal village for several weeks due to heavy rains, and spends his time musing on the nature of man as nomad and settler, connecting his Australian experiences with those of other nomadic cultures he experienced in his travels around the world. Chatwin develops a thesis about the primordial nature of
Aboriginal song and its connections with the evolutionary conditions under which human populations evolved. The writing engages the hard conditions of life for present-day Indigenous Australians, including the fraught and contradictory relationship with
White Australians, while appreciating the art and culture of the people for whom the Songlines are the touchstone of
reality. While the names are changed, most of the characters and places in the story are based on real-life counterparts, although Chatwin later said the book should be considered a work of fiction. According to Chatwin's biographer Nicholas Shakespeare, Chatwin spent a total of 9 weeks in Central Australia, first in February 1983 and returning again in March of 1984. The latter trip was organized ostensibly around a March 10 appearance at the
Adelaide Writer's Week Festival where Chatwin appeared on a panel entitled "Fact, Fiction, Truth?" alongside writers
Blanche d'Alpuget,
Thomas Keneally,
Barbara Jefferis, and Jean-Marc Lovay. Later that day, Chatwin's friend and fellow writer
Salman Rushdie also gave a reading at the festival, and after the festival Chatwin and Rushdie travelled together to Alice Springs, where they rented a Land Cruiser and climbed
Ayers Rock. Looking to continue research on
The Songlines, Chatwin was able to secure a permit to stay in the Aboriginal Village of
Kintore for a period for two weeks, starting on March 18, although upon arriving found it difficult to speak with the local residents due to barriers in language and his outsider status. Preliminary work on the rail line from Alice Springs to Darwin was being planned by the federal government as early as 1981 and had been a major topic of debate in Australian politics during that time, although by mid 1983 the project had been officially cancelled (it eventually was completed in 2004). Friends and observers later surmised that the "fiction" label was largely a means to avoid questions about the veracity of various quotes and ideas presented in the work, especially around a topic as sensitive as Aboriginal mythology. After returning to England, Chatwin spent the next several years working to finish the book while struggling with the debilitating complications of what he (correctly) suspected was the
HIV virus. Rushdie later remarked, "That book was an obsession too great for him, a monkey he carried around on his back. His illness did him a favour, got him free of it. Otherwise, he would have gone on writing it for ten years."
Thesis Chatwin asserts that language started as song, and in the Aboriginal
Dreamtime, it sang the land into existence for the conscious mind and memory. As you sing the land, the tree, the rock, the path, they come to be, and the singers are one with them. Chatwin combines evidence from Aboriginal culture with modern ideas on human evolution, and argues that on the African
Savannah, we were a migratory species hunted by a dominant feline predator. Our wanderings spread "songlines" across the globe (generally from southwest to northeast), eventually reaching Australia, where they are now preserved in the world's oldest living culture. ==Reactions==