Oceania Books
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great book on Sydney!Review Date: 2000-09-10
A Generous View of a Fast-Disappearing CityReview Date: 1999-09-06
Not surprisingly, then, Morris is generous toward Sydney, honoring its brief history but focusing on its childlike present. Since the book was completed, of course, the child has become an adolescent, frantically acquiring attractions that will make it seem more adult -- preening itself for its moment on the world stage in the 2000 Olympics. Like many books about childhood, this one should be read wistfully, with the knowledge that the city it describes is only a snapshot, circa 1990, of a place that seems to be disappearing under its own need for approval.
Of course, during the inevitable post-Olympics hangover, this book may be useful in another way. When we lose track of who we are, when the purpose that has obsessed us suddenly evaporates, it's sometimes helpful to recall what gave us pleasure when we were children. At such a moment, Morris's portrait of Sydney in its last moments of childhood may offer the city a route back to its core, and thus forward into a happier adulthood.

Battalion level view of CombatReview Date: 2005-07-17
Outstanding narrative of leadership during Falklands.Review Date: 1998-02-08

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Comprehensive and InspiringReview Date: 2002-02-16
Don't Go Down Under Without It!Review Date: 2001-07-31


Takes you thereReview Date: 2005-11-02
Ancient Polynesia was the world's most advanced maritime civilization for thousands of years, despite its lack of writing and metal. I've always wanted to understand it from the inside, and Vaka is the only book I've read that actually delivered.
A great read and historically correct dramatization.Review Date: 1998-11-06

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A good beginning for the price.Review Date: 2008-01-29
Invaluable!Review Date: 2006-06-15
Much of it is, for better or worse, devoted to describing the two biggest and most visited countries, Australia and New Zealand. Coverage of these is good, but since there are also single country guides to them you could also use those.
Where this book really becomes invaluable is its coverage of the often little-known archipelagos of Oceania: Melanesia, Polynesia and Micronesia. Few of these countries are often visited by birders, yet even the remotest ones, like Pitcairn, are described. Since other guides to nature reserves of these island nations are basically non-existant, descriptions and maps of remote islands and forested regions are of interest to anyone with an interest in the fauna of the Pacific.
But of course, twitchers are well served too - with lists of endemics, key sites to see each one, suggested itineraries and the like.
A worthy investment for your trip!

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It was like learning my father's war experience first handReview Date: 2007-07-27
Very good combat memoir of the Southwest PacificReview Date: 2005-01-12

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happy little vegemite!Review Date: 2006-01-03
great read - better than a travel guide.Review Date: 2005-11-16
The only down side is that it isn't longer.

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Bligh's TemperReview Date: 2008-05-31
Bligh--a man of tremendous strengths--had at least one glaring weakness. He was a man with a red hot temper. Granted--like many people given to "blowing their tops"--he got over it quickly but, unfortunately for him, some people targeted by his flare-ups had difficulty forgetting his insults. Perhaps amazingly, his crew--largely composed of very young, no doubt immature men--went through great trials before they finally broke. Even then, the majority of men remained faithful to their fallen leader, to the point of sailing with him into almost certain death.
Somewhere here we are missing some of the most important psychological aspects of the story. I try to place myself in the role of "loyal" crewman and wonder what I would have chosen on the day of the mutiny. Would I have elected almost certain death in a leaky skiff over probable survival in the Bounty? I don't really know but it would have been one Hell of a decision. Still, the majority of crewmen remained loyal and tried to pile into a rowboat with 7 inches of freeboard!
At the same time, despite Bligh's navigational skills and despite his courage, his must be regarded as a failure in leadership. I'm not sure where this failure occurred but it probably happened on Otaheite. He should have--in retrospect--been less lenient with his "men". Most of these were very young people, many only teenagers, some of whom were permitted to live amongst the Polynesians. It must have been a heady brew. They received respect that they'd never experienced in England. They obtained women, even wives, and were tatooed in displays of tribal honor. It was simply too attractive to many of these boys. Twenty-three year old Fletcher Christian should have known better but--suffering from alcohol and the pressure of obligations he no doubt felt to his Polynesian brethren--he cracked like a spoiled egg. Nowadays, psychologists would probably diagnose clinical depression and I have little doubt that Christian had "been in Hell for weeks", just as he described.
I'm not sympathetic with the mutineers. Captains--men of flesh and blood--weren't perfect and the Admiralty recognized this fact. The crew were supposed to be loyal and beyond provocation. Period. The mutinous members of the crew paid for the sins one way or another--just as they deserved. It is unfortunate that some loyal crewmen paid their price, too.
Ron Braithwaite, author of novels--"Skull Rack" and "Hummingbird God"--on the Spanish Conquest of Mexico
Extremely well written, Lots & lots of research!Review Date: 2007-12-03
Well researched, good narrativeReview Date: 2007-09-03
Gripping good (yarn) Review Date: 2007-10-18
The bibliography and source reference is massive. There are times where the author does not help us in understanding dialect and the meaning behind actions.
Alexander decides to begin with a summary, and the hunt for the fugitive mutineers (by the ship Pandora). We are then introduced to the Bounty (long delays leaving England's harbor) and the journey to bring back breadfruit (initiated by botanist Sir Joseph Banks). She gives us a brief background and early life of Bligh, the shipmates and the ship itself. Bligh proved to be intelligent and a good leader. Fletcher Christian (the lead mutineer) also had a promising career ahead.
There are perhaps dozens of reasons for the mutiny; the accounts vary. But the officers decline in leadership and the corruption at Tahiti are strong ones.
The final mutineers defense and sentence at the court martial draws the reader in, especially the writings of seventeen year old mutineer Peter Heywood. We find ourselves sympathizing with him. I find that even these young men had a superior intellect compared to today, and were considered "responsible" at a much earlier age. The escaped mutineers adopted an island, later to be discovered by a U.S. ship:
What they find on the island is more a garden of Eden. The descendants are Christian in faith, they are hard working, prosperous, and loving. Over time, the myths and falsities of the lives of the men of the Bounty are slowly being worked out.
"What caused the mutiny on the Bounty? The seduction at Tahiti, Bligh's harsh tongue----perhaps. But more compellingly a night of drinking and a proud man's pride, a low moment on one gray dawn, a momentary and fatal slip in a gentleman's code of discipline----and then the rush of consequences to be lived out for a lifetime."
Wish you well
Scott
Exhaustive and grippingReview Date: 2007-08-27
Which is not to say that the reading is not compelling. Alexander goes to some pains to strip away the romantic veneer covering over the facts of the mutiny and those culpable in its execution. Nor does she provide complete exoneration to Captain Bligh, who is revealed as an able, conscientious and decent man, whose few failings were amplified by a flawed crew and lack of support (mainly in the absence of marines on board The Bounty) from the Admiralty. Oddly, but appropriately for such a scholarly work, Alexander pieces together much of what is known about lead mutineer Fletcher Christian from the extant evidence, which in most cases is second hand.
The exhaustive nature of the book does tend to drag in places. The build up to court martial introduces the tiresome (no more here though than she was doubtlessly so in life) Fanny Hayward, along with detailed explanation of the members of the court martial. Interesting and ultimately useful in sorting out the fractured loyalties that defined these men and their subsequent actions, it does get to be slow reading.
But more than a story of one mutiny in the Pacific, it is a tale of a changing world, where the virgin paradise of Tahiti is imbued with the failings of the British Empire, where Nelson's final words, "thank God I have done my duty," are not the anthem of a subsequent age but an epitaph for a waning one. An epic worth reading.

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Best of the bestReview Date: 2006-10-02
Annoying interjectionsReview Date: 2007-05-22
Bruce Chatwin wrote half a book...Review Date: 2007-04-17
However, Bruce Chatwin chose to use this book to publish assorted observations, quotes, and reflections from other travels. For me (me), they affected the flow of his storytelling, my ability to focus on the theme - Australia, not nomads - and the ending. Perhaps this is a style thing, and I don't know if Chatwin applies this style in his other books.
Didn't work for me. I wanted a conclusion to his original story.
Aboriginals in AustraliaReview Date: 2007-03-13
It was during his time as a schoolteacher in Walbiri that Arkadi learned of the labyrinth of invisible pathways which meander all over Australia and are known to Europeans as Songlines - a way for Aboriginals to sing out the name of everything that crosses their path during their wanderings: birds, animals, plants, rocks, waterholes and so sing the world in existence.
When a route is suggested for a new Alice to Darwin railway line, Arkady's job is to identify the traditional landowners, to drive them over their old hunting grounds and to get them to reveal which rock or soak or ghost-gum is the work of a Dreamtime hero. Bruce is happy to join Arkady and to spend some time "out bush".
The reader of this novel learns a lot about Australia and the Aboriginals. The plot and the characters however are a bit thin. One finds it hard to sympathise with the Aboriginal figures appearing in the story. What they have to say and the way they express themselves amounts to practically nothing. It seems as though they need the white people to tell their stories and traditions.
The SonglinesReview Date: 2005-12-17

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Weapons TestingReview Date: 2007-03-22
Sorry is a teenager living on the Bikini Islands in the western Pacific. He is a member of a tiny village of peaceful people who still live off of the land, without any modern conveniences such as electricity or telephones. They fish and gather coconuts to eat and are happy with their lives. But the United States has decided that the Bikini Islands, with their lagoon full of fish, would be a perfect place to test the atom bomb. All of a sudden, Sorry and his entire village are expected to move to another place to live.
This is a true story, giving a point of view I'd never considered. It's a difficult issue to justify, moving a large group of people in order to test a weapon. I liked how each chapter started with a bit of history about the creation of the atom bomb. I thought this book went a bit overboard in describing how perfect the lives of the islanders were; I don't believe any society is completely without conflict.
You'll love The Bomb!Review Date: 2005-03-16
Sorry Rinamu is living on Bikini with his sister, Lokileni, his mother, Ruta, his grandparents, Yolo and Jonjen, and the rest of the small community on this little island. Suddenly, their world turned upside-down.
During the war, the Japanese had taken over Bikini and used it for the location of a weather station while they wreaked havoc. Soon, the Americans captured it from the Japanese, but this proved to be even worse.
This book is amazingly gripping and descriptive. It wonderfully describes the Bikinians' plight with the atom bomb. This adventure novel is one of the best historical fiction books I've ever read.
Theodore Taylor has written many novels, and this one is a great addition to his collection. Believe it or not, he has actually been to, or done many of the things mentioned in his books.
The Bomb is a must-read book for anyone who likes suspense-filled historical fiction. You'll love it!
The bombReview Date: 2007-05-18
I felt that I could relate to the main character Sorry. Because I once had to take charge agianst my friends. I wanted to stand out and show them that I wasn't afraid to do what needed to be done. In the book it was the same situation.
That makes me feel that a lot of people get in this type of situation and it ends up in all the same situation.
Taylor uses a lot of facts in this book and to me that's what makes this book so great. Everyone should buy a copy and read it.
The Bomb Book Reveiw Review Date: 2005-02-26
The islanders had always lived peacefully on Bikini Atoll. They spent their time fishing, making copra, and picking coconuts among other things. Until, the war when the Japanese took them captive and used the island for weather stations. The Americans freed the islanders from the Japanese but soon told them they would use the island for atomic tests and the islanders would have to leave for two years. Sorry Rinamu and his Uncle Abram don't believe the American's promise.
Sorry's father had died when he was young so when Sorry was 14 he became the man of the family. He lived with his mother, his sister, his grandparents, and his uncle. Sorry believes the island will be poisoned and they would never return. I really liked him because he was very brave and he would do whatever it takes to save his island even if he was risking his own life.
Uncle Abram was another one of my favorite characters because he traveled around the world in an American merchant ship and escaped to return to Bikini. He was one of the only islanders to go far from the Atolls and the only one who spoke English. Abram is very angry at the US and is Sorry's inspiration to stand up to them.
The author really made you care about his characters and what they believed in. His writing style was very simple and was straight to the point but he really made you feel like you were on the ship leaving your home.
Theodore Taylor got his inspiration for this book when he worked on the US ship as a deck officer in Bikini Lagoon. He found a doll on the on the shore and felt very guilty about the removal of the islanders. It is scary to think that our own country did these things to these people and to think if it ever happened to us.
The Bomb can be scary and sad but I think it is something everyone should read and know about. So if you're looking for a good book to read, The Bomb would be a great choice.
How to Raise Men Without ChestsReview Date: 2006-05-08
C.S. Lewis wrote, "We make men without chests and expect of them virtue and enterprise. We laugh at honour and are shocked to find traitors in our midst." This book is another step in that effort.
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