'Eleanor Hogan’s Into the Loneliness is a detailed and engaging biographical work. It will be of great interest to academic and professional historians – and members of the wider public – concerned with twentieth-century Australian cultural history and the settler-colonial inheritance in (and beyond) Australia. As well as being an important addition to the literature on Daisy Bates, Hogan’s book makes two other, major contributions: it represents the most comprehensive piece of biographical research on journalist and travel writer, Ernestine Hill; it is also the most thoroughgoing appraisal of the nature, circumstances and products of the collaboration between Bates and Hill (which produced the ‘My Natives and I’ articles and The Passing of the Aborigines).' (Introduction)