Australia Books
Related Subjects: New South Wales ACT Tasmania Queensland South Australia Victoria
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Used price: $17.00

ClassicReview Date: 2008-08-08
ExcellentReview Date: 2008-05-17
intriguing and eye-opening!Review Date: 2007-12-24
That a primitive (by European or American standards) people were skilled at ocean navigation was thought absurd. Kon-Tiki was an attempt to show that Oceania could be populated from South America by drifting on rafts and sheer luck of landfall. But it is now established that there was skilled and purposeful exploration and colonization--including Rapa Nui (Easter Island) which is 1000 miles from the nearest other habitable island. We, the Navigators is a fascinating look at "primitive" navigation techniques, and the author himself sailed from Hawaii to Tahiti using only these ancient techniques.
So you'll see how the Polynesians used the sun, moon, and stars to achieve accurate navigation. They also used the ocean swells (as distinct from waves): islands reflect and deflect swells, so by careful observation, you can get a sense of direction to landfall. Land also changes cloud patterns. Birds were watched intently. New Zealand was one of the last places found and peopled--from 1600 miles away from the northeast, perhaps by watching birds migrate in that direction. Different kinds of birds travel different distances from land--some travel 40-50 miles, others 20-25 miles: by observing at dawn where the birds came from, and observing which direction they went towards sunset, and seeing what kind of bird it was, you could tell that there was land, and what direction it was, and how far away it was as well. On leaving land, backsights would be taken to help establish currents and drift. The book has lots of drawings and illustrations--it's a real treat!
An academic book by a knowledgable navigatorReview Date: 2002-04-23
The downside is that it can send you to sleep as the author systematically compares how the navigational techniques are practiced in the various island groups.
The strength of the book is not only its thoroughness but also the fact that the author is a skilled sailor who has gone on trips using these techniques. This makes the material so much more authentic, because the reader can relate how effective these skills are and yet how much practice they require.
The author provides commentary on many practices and relates them to our modern day knowledge. An example was their ability to recognize the impact of sub surface currents, something that is today a rather specialist piece of knowledge not available to the everyday sailor.
Oceanic navigation classicReview Date: 2004-07-27
Used price: $21.53

Great Showcase of Australian Wildlife to Introduce to ChildrenReview Date: 2007-10-21
Originally published in Australia in 1984 this book has more than stood the test of time bringing joy to children throughout time. A basic but good storyline combined with great illustrations means this is going to be a constant request by children to be read to them again and again and again. This book is an excellent book to teach children about the different types of creatures in Australia. Although the book doesn't give information on them the drawings are so well done you can expand from the storyline to point out the platypus' duck like bill, echidna's spines and other fairly unique adaptations particular Australian animals have.
Just in case you're wondering the basic plot of wombat stew is a dingo catches a wombat and boasts to everyone (all types of Australian animals) that he is going to shortly be enjoying gooey, brewy, yummy, chewy, wombat stew. These other animals are friends with the wombat and have a cunning plan to save their friend by giving suggestions of other ingredients to add to the stew. For those parents who now how to play or whose kids are learning a musical instrument the final page has the music score to the Dingo's song so the notes can be followed and played by instruments of some kids and sung along by others.
The constant lack of availability and selling out of Wombat Stew is a good lesson to keep good children's books even when your kids have moved on to older reading level books. In the future if you have more kids, friends have kids, you have grandkids etc they will all be very grateful when you come to visit with this classic. For those who don't yet have a copy rest assured though, there will always be anniversary editions of great Australian classics such as this.
Other great Australian wildlife fiction classics for kids by other authors you should check out are Possum Magic, Olga the Brolga and Edward the Emu.
"It's the ooey-gooeyist treat"Review Date: 2006-01-15
Recently released - 21st Anniversary editionReview Date: 2005-08-11
Morgann's #1 Review!Review Date: 2002-10-02
Simply the bestReview Date: 2000-09-29
We read this first when my son was 18 months old; ten years later, it still finds its way out of the bookshelf once in a while. How can such a classic be out of print?

These books are fantasticReview Date: 2008-04-24
"Austria" reviewReview Date: 2008-01-03
Excellent Guide!Review Date: 2007-12-12
Virtual Austria in PrintReview Date: 2008-02-08
Great Guide!Review Date: 2007-11-30

Used price: $3.50

Kangaroos galore!Review Date: 2008-07-31
kangaroosReview Date: 2007-08-08
Entertaining Scientific MemoirReview Date: 2007-10-17
Flannery takes his own advice more than once, like the time he was driving in the Northern Territory and a wallaby dashed in front of him before he could swerve. It was a "nailtail" because its whip-like tail has a sort of fingernail at the end, and no one knows why it has such a thing because no one has ever seen it put to use. Flannery took the deceased nailtail back to his camp to anatomize its leg and feet; it is not surprising that these regions give the most clues about kangaroos' evolutionary descent. He also took steaks from the haunches, and reports that the resultant stew produced a meat that tasted like steak and mushrooms and was far superior to the meat of the red kangaroo (that's the kangaroo we non-Australians think of as "the" kangaroo, although there are plenty of others in different sizes, shapes, and colors). Unfortunately, the carcass was also tasty enough for some birds of prey to steal from him overnight, so his museum never got the specimen. Flannery does not deal in just recent kills, but some that have been extinct for millions of years, like _Propleopus oscillans_, the killer kangaroo. Don't worry; the huge carnivorous beast is long extinct, but it has been the subject of some of Flannery's own research, and he goes into some detail about how he did research and came to understand its environmental role, its teeth giving clues about it's carnivorous nature. Flannery describes his scientific jubilation: "Then there were a delicious couple of days when, as I worked on my theory without telling anyone else, I was the only person on Earth who knew that great, carnivorous kangaroos once stalked Australia." Subsequent finds of skulls confirm the theory, but beyond that there is a mystery, for a single arm bone is the only other fossil remnant of the creature ever found.
Another extraordinary thing about these creatures is that although they evolved in isolated islands with no hope of swimming to other lands, humans have arranged for them to populate new worlds, and kangaroos have flourished in unusual places. It is perhaps not too surprising to learn that brush-tailed rock-wallabies have done well on the island of Oahu in Hawaii. They are descendants of two who escaped from a menagerie in 1916. It is surprising, however, that there is a colony of grey kangaroos living happily in the forests west of Paris, France. Thirty years ago, a bungled theft of animals resulted in freedom for the greys who have prospered, much to the delight of the locals. And another extraordinary thing is that the male kangaroo has a scrotum hanging in front of his penis. And another extraordinary thing is that the female has two vaginas, and gives birth through neither of them (a special canal forms around birth time). And another extraordinary thing... Well, Flannery's book is full of them, and his enthusiasm in presenting them to the reader is a delight throughout.
G'day mate! Time to learn about the land down unda and learn about its roos!!Review Date: 2007-10-14
"Australia was once dominated by people who loved the mother country--a land of lush greens and as alien to my [present-day] country as any could be. Today, Australians are more likely to proclaim a love of things native, yet because they often lack a true understanding of their environment, theirs is a love that can kill. Such well-meaning but uncomprehending enthusiasm is one reason why many Aboriginal communities continue to struggle under insupportable burdens, why native species [like species of kangaroos] keep vanishing, and why our future is being cut short by an insatiable addiction to fossil fuels. It is why I wrote this book. We have now embarked on a new phase of our national existence, and just where it will lead I do not know. But I have a sinking feeling that unless every Australian searches profoundly for ways to help our land survive, things are likely to end badly for ourselves and this great island continent."
The above is the last paragraph of this fascinating book by Australian paleontologist (and concerned environmentalist) Tim Flannery, who received his PhD from the Department of Earth Sciences, University of New South Whales.
Generally, this book is a blend of three things:
(1) His early years as a paleontologist and his continuing exciting work as a "fossil hunter"
(2) A natural history of the unique Australian landscape
(3) A study of the evolution of the equally unique kangaroo. This early evolution of kangaroos was virtually unknown until Flannery came along. (The search for this evolutionary past is what drives this book's main narrative.)
Many people might think that these are three reasons not to read it. Well, not for me! What this book did was made me understand why Flannery was named 2007 "Australian of the Year" and why he a scientist, explorer, and conservationist of "international acclaim" and "interdisciplinary brilliance."
What I found apparent as I read this book is that Flannery knows his science and presents it well when doing actual fieldwork (some of it hazardous) and research to trace the evolution of kangaroos. But there is much more to this book than just scientific precision.
Flannery embellishes his main narrative with humor and gives us his impressions. He fills each chapter with actual Australian characters he meets along the way. However, for me, it was his enthusiasm for his subject that made this book such a joy to read. The result is that this book is like a "love letter" to Flannery's native Australia and its most strikingly remarkable inhabitant: the kangaroo.
My favorite chapters have the following titles:
(1) Captain Cook's kangaroo
(2) Kangaroo essence
(3) The mystery of hopping
(4) The oldest kangaroo
(5) Where the great roos came from
(6) The age of kangaroos
(7) Grass for the kangaroos
(8) A dingo-driven revolution
Throughout are black and white illustrations (drawings, maps, pictures, etc.) that highlight aspects of the main narrative. As well, there are a dozen color pictures near the middle of the book. (By the way, the book's cover {displayed above by Amazon} shows a picture of a red kangaroo--the symbol of Australia.)
Finally, just before the introduction to the book is a black and white map of Australia. On it, Flannery has placed the locations of key places that he visits and explores in his main narrative. I recommend photocopying this map and using it to follow his travels.
In conclusion, this is a captivating book that's a blend of memoir, travel, natural history, and evolutionary science. After I finished reading it, I realized that Dr. Tim Flannery should have a nickname similar to his fictional Australian counterpart "Crocodile Dundee." How about:
"Kangaroo Flannery."
(first published 2007; map; introduction; 26 chapters; postscript; main narrative 250 pages; kangaroo family tree; acknowledgements; bibliography; index)
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A breezy and fun readReview Date: 2007-08-27
Anyone who has ever seen a kangaroo "hop"...and I do mean they HOP....will marvel at their overall structure and Flannery, rightly so, gives a detailed account about how they get around, beginning with the physical diversity of the feet of the many different kangaroos. Not all of the dispensed information is cute and cuddly....a description of their digestive systems is downright unappealing...but Flannery covers it all in a narrative style that is mostly well-paced.
His opening recounting of a trip around Australia when he was in his teens can be a bit of a drudge and by that measure it takes a while to get into things. However, I highly recommend "Chasing Kangaroos"...it's simply a fun and educational book.
Used price: $3.92

THE LONELY LORD OF THE SEAReview Date: 2007-08-20
Inspirational CousteauReview Date: 2006-07-13
A great author for a great bookReview Date: 2003-06-04
I hail thee, Great White Shark!Review Date: 1999-10-05
Jaws!Review Date: 2001-06-15

Used price: $31.55

A great story, lots of good information about Australia tooReview Date: 2008-09-01
A fabulous story of a family's triumph.Review Date: 2007-10-24
I can't say enough about how wonderful this book is. It's the story of a family in Australia who are at the very bottom of the social ladder (they are garbage collectors, and the dad is usually in jail) struggling to find a place in the world. The narrator is the youngest son (Mole Maloney), who, like his father and grandfather, becomes one of the most gifted bush firefighters in his region. He accompanies a slew of wonderful family members and close friends as he tells the story of his familly's adventures through the years between WWII and the Viet Nam war.
Each member of the Maloney family is a fabulous, admirable character. By the end of the book you just want to erect a monument to all of them. It's wonderfully moving, and quintessentially Australian. I can't rave about it enough. I cried multiple times when reading this book. It's just fantastic.
Bryce Courtenay's other novels are equally great, if you haven't read them.
A fantastic book with inspiring charactersReview Date: 2005-07-05
Courtenay does it again!Review Date: 2005-07-31
Overrated, Overwritten and Overhyped!!!Review Date: 2005-08-31

Fun, Adventure, Humor and Discovery!Review Date: 1998-03-03
An enlightning tour of the Pacific Rim countries.Review Date: 1998-08-13
Arnold RimmerReview Date: 2002-10-26
Also suggested- "Hemingway Adventure"
MagnificentReview Date: 2000-04-06
What you would have seen in the PacificReview Date: 1998-07-28
Ahh... I can imagine myself right now on the streets of China getting a massage from a blind man.

Kids Addiction on CarbsReview Date: 1999-11-27
Buy this book if you ate junk food this week!Review Date: 2000-05-27
Buy this book if you ate junk food this week!Review Date: 2000-05-27
I've done it and it's wonderfulReview Date: 1999-12-24
Life Saving PlanReview Date: 2002-03-06

Is that it?Review Date: 2003-03-25
A riveting book especially for those who recall the music of his era. You will laugh and you may cry even if it is only because the book ends years short of the present day.
Excellent and InspiringReview Date: 1999-08-15
great bookReview Date: 1999-03-29
Banana RepublicationReview Date: 2003-06-12
How much of it is true, we'll never know. But the essential bits (the inception of the Boomtown Rats, their immersion into the music scene, other bands, Live Aid, etc.) are required reading for anybody who gives a damn about the music industry. There's loads of comedy as well as pathos, as well as some of the greatest quotes I've ever read in an autobiography.
If you can still find a copy, it's well worth owning.
best autobiography i've ever readReview Date: 2000-04-11

My Two-year-old Gives This Five Stars!Review Date: 2007-12-06
Roger Hargreaves' story is short, simple, and easy for kids to follow, with just enough alliteration to make it fun. His pictures are bright and bring the story to life.
My son so loves this book that every time he sees a "smiley face" he exclaims "Mr Happy in Happyland!"
Mr. HappyReview Date: 2007-10-18
amazingReview Date: 2001-07-20
The Sunshiny Face Review Date: 2006-05-30
Perhaps you are low on happiness? Perhaps you seek meaning in a world of war and sadness? Mr. Happy is for you. Will he make you happy? Perhaps not. Yet he will teach you the ways of the happy man, and that is all you can ask of a Mr. Men book. They are small books that tell a small story, yet somehow, they are more vast than the ocean.
This is Life.Review Date: 2005-04-24
It really is just Life. Joy, just plain, simple, happy joy. I will always keep this book with me. Im confident that it is the single best way to live a nice, drawn out and good life. So simple of a lesson, such a primordial concept is woven into this book, it really is the one true good book.
And really, to everyone under our bright star, I wish a sunny trees and rolling grassy fields under kind yellow sunlight.
My life is attributed to the Sun, Joy, Life and Mr. Happy
Related Subjects: New South Wales ACT Tasmania Queensland South Australia Victoria
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