Reading "The True History of the Kelly Gang" by Peter Carey, told in the first person (narrated) by Ned Kelley. Which goes marvelously and hardly needs my recommendation (it won the Booker Prize which is almost as good anyways).
I'll take the liberty of repeating one of the passages - it's the standard deal with the devil, Whitty has been given a bag full of marbles, and each time he throws one through a church window one of his wishes comes true. But the time for collection is almost nigh, and Whitty still has his final wish:
"Said Whitty to the Devil I want you to make honest men of lawyers
Now as you know the Devil is a coal black thing he does not have skin but scales so when he hears what Whiity asks those scales turn pale the colour of this ash here. I can't do that says the Devil. Oh you must says Whitty. I can't says the Devil if I did that I would be idle from one week's end to the next and never a coal to warm myself."
Ned Kelly figures highly in Australian mythology and folklore, so highly that an abstract painting of him by Sydney Nolan set records at auction.
But this is not a review...It's a speculation on what became of the loot of the bush rangers. Surely there must be a few unrecovered treasures Down Under? And a bit of Googling and what do I find....
Some links to get you started: facebook (tale of Ben Hall), Weddin Mountains Treasure Hunt, Australian Bush Tales.