The travellers risking their lives to stay in Oz
Natalia Ferrazzano was exhausted. She’d been travelling for 10 hours straight, and it was now pitch black outside. Out of the corner of her eye, she looked at the man driving her to his property on the remote Kangaroo Island in South Australia – scruffy beard, a stench of stale alcohol, eyes that kept shifting to look at her, instead of the road. He’d collected her from the ferry, and straight away, she’d started to feel uneasy. She’d applied to work on the sheep farm to get the authentic outback experience. But as they drove into the blackness of the countryside, it was beginning to feel more like the start of a horror movie.
As they pulled up at a crumbling farmhouse, she looked on at the place she would be calling home for the next three months. There were no street lights, and the last time they’d passed another house was about 10km back. She looked down at her phone: no reception.
‘Is there Wi-Fi?’ she asked the man sitting next to her, a sheep farmer, who was to be her boss. ‘None,’ he replied abruptly.
He showed her to her room and she shut the door behind her, locking it tightly. For the next six days, she worked on the farm, herding sheep and marking lambs. There were supposed to be other backpackers sharing the house – he’d told her there would be – but she was all alone.
Esta historia es de la edición August 2018 de Cosmopolitan Australia.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 8500 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor ? Conectar
Esta historia es de la edición August 2018 de Cosmopolitan Australia.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 8500 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor? Conectar
THE THEATRE - PHOTO REALISM
Moisés Kaufman's Here There Are Blueberries.”
Thataway Thomas McGuane
The two sisters were growing old now, but they went on gazing toward Palm Springs from this windblown prairie town as though to Mecca.
FAMILY PORTRAIT
In his latest novel, Garth Risk Hallberg shrinks his frame.
AGE OF ANXIETY
The love songs of Billie Eilish.
A REPORTER AT LARGE YOU MAKE ME SICK
How corporate scientists discovered—and then helped to conceal—the dangers of forever chemicals.
THE WORLD OF TELEVISION CASTOFFS
REALITY-TV CONTESTANTS ARE BARELY PAID, AND THE EXPERIENCE CAN FEEL LIKE ABUSE. SHOULD THEY UNIONIZE?
ONWARD AND UPWARD WITH TECHNOLOGY ABRIDGED TOO FAR
The world according to Blinkist.
ANNALS OF INQUIRY WAIT FOR IT
Suspense in literature and life.
SHOUTS & MURMURS IDENTIFIED
A panel of scientific experts commissioned by NASA to study unidentified anomalous phenomena,” more widely known as UFOs, said Thursday that it found no evidence that any of the reported objects were extraterrestrial in origin.
A CRITIC AT LARGE SAY THE WORD
Why liberals struggle to defend liberalism.
EYES UP HERE
The perils and pleasures of a nice rack.
THE CURRENT CINEMA APOCALYPSE WHEN
“Megalopolis.”
ON THE CAMPAIGN TRIAL
Trump is running for president while bumping into the past at a Manhattan criminal courthouse.
War of Attrition
In the Kendrick-vs.-Drake battle, no one wins.
More Than Mad
Grief drives a fantastic installment in George Miller's series.
Timothy Lai
Painted Syncopation
Mickalene Thomas
Is All About Love
A Soft Touch
Mystic Reality & Cashmere Dreams with Adrian Schachter
rafa esparza
A Sense of Generosity
The Cannabis Crackdown Begins
The Adams administration's \"Operation Padlock to Protect\" gets underway.
Nobody Wants to Mow the Lawn at the Beach
Breck and Georgia Eisner's Amagansett retreat gives the children a cottage of their own.
Small Plates, Big Checks
Why restaurant prices feel so high—and why they’re going to stay that way.
We've Hit Peak Theater
Nobody knows how to succeed on Broadway anymore.
Katherine Bernhardt
Everlasting Butter
The Burn to Rebirth
Valencia, Spain During Fallas
Sabrina Bockler
Conversing From Within
MIRIAM ADELSON'S UNFINISHED BUSINESS
One of Israel's most ardent supporters, she could transform the presidential election if she gives to Trump like she did in 2020.
The Power of a Purple Crayon
Rebecca Ness Coming Into Her Own
Felt and Flora
Sagarika Sundaram's Enveloping Organisms
Eric Yahnker
The Serious Side of a Joke