'This chapter draws on ecocriticism and critical plant studies to argue that Nadia Wheatley and Donna Rawlins’ My Place ([1987] 2008) can—and should—be read as a plant-centred narrative. Australia’s unique landscape, with its towering ghost gums, sun-baked bushland and vast red sand, plays an intrinsic part in Australian picturebook storytelling. In My Place, this landscape is transformed—both figuratively and literally—as a bustling Sydney suburb in 1988 slowly transforms into an Aboriginal creek camp in 1788. Ultimately, only one natural element endures the centuries of change and industrial progress: a centuries-old fig tree. While it is the social and political nature of My Place that is most often critically examined, this chapter focuses on the environmental elements of the book, while examining the ethical issues of non-Indigenous authors telling First Nations stories. It argues that the fig tree acts as both a keeper of memories and a “survivor tree.” Not only does it create a shared bond between the book’s narrators across time, but it also ties all of their stories—and thus all of the history and memories held within them—together.' (Publication abstract)