Eight years after his death and a half a century after he found the richest and largest lode of iron ore on earth, Lang Hancock continues to fascinate.
This is the story of a larger-than-life man and his achievements, a portrait of the person behind the household name - a brilliant, belligerent man with the Midas touch whose head-to-head combat with some of the most powerful people in the country never failed to make headlines. Lang was not known for tempering his attitudes or his criticisms with tolerance.
A sixth-generation Australian, Lang's forebears carved their name in the remote Pilbara region of Western Australia. The resiliences of his pioneering ancestors and the romance and hardship of the outback were instrumental in shaping Lang's character. He played the game by his own rules.
This is also the story of a myth and the people who helped create it - characters like Joh Bjelke-Petersen, Sir Charles Court, President Nicolau Ceausescu, Brian Bourke and Lee Kuan Yew. To his supporters, Hancock was a genius, a "rogue bull" who was imposing in the boardroom but happiest in the Pilbara bush. To his opponents, he was an arch-capitalist, an outspoken reactionary and a racist. He didn't open doors, he put his boot through them.
Ultimately, it was Lang's wealth that played a pivotal part in his lonely death. Far from making him happy at the end of his life, Lang became a fractious, flinty dinosaur of a man at the centre of bitter struggles over his fortune. The public feuds which continue to shock, titillate and entertain the public are in danger of overshadowing the fact that Lang was his own man - a man of many faces.