Oceania Books


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Oceania Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Oceania
Americans' Survival Guide to Australia and Australian-American Dictionary
Published in Paperback by Virtualbookworm.com Publishing (2007-08-20)
Author: Rusty Geller
List price: $15.95
New price: $14.36
Used price: $18.26

Average review score:

TWO COUNTRIES SEPARATED BY A COMMON LANGUAGE...
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-20
Having travelled back & forth between the U.S. and Australia for 30 years, I thought I knew my way around Down Under pretty well. However, once we decided to move over permanently, I soon realized I might as well have come from another planet!! If only we had a survival guide like this to combat the daily head scratching and keep our sense of humor alive!

If you are making the trip for the first time, planning to stay awhile or just curious about the cultural differences, this little book will open your eyes to the subtle variances that are discovered only by interesting experiences. Highly recommended for keeping you safely to the left, in harmony with the Aussie attitude of 'no worries' and out of socially embarrasing moments when you might say the 'wrong' thing! Enjoy the book and the country!!

Packed With Information
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-16
This book is packed with valuable and interesting information. The Australian-American dictionary is also valuable and humorous. I ran many of the terms by a few Australian friends, and they confirmed they use the terms all the time (terms that most Americans would NOT understand). All in all, this is a terrific book and well worth the price for anyone that's traveling to or moving to Australia.

You say 'Jello', I say 'Jelly'. You say 'TeeVee', I say 'Telly'!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-20
A Review of Americans' Survival Guide to Australia and Australian-American Dictionary (Paperback)
by Rusty Geller (Author)


Having been brought up in both the US and Australia, I bought this book out of curiosity for how one side saw the other and was surprised by it's breadth. Not only is it packed with the kind of information those who are visiting or emigrating from America (US/Canada) really need to know, Geller also weaves stories of his own experiences throughout which added reality and kept me reading.

Often guide books are presented too technically, but not so with this one. The style is easy and understandable all the way through. I have not read a book like this from cover to cover before, but this one taught me things I didn't know about Australia. There is also an extensive contents and index that pin point's particular issues quickly.

The first part of the book takes you on a journey that unveils the intricacies of all the issues you are likely to need to know about to successfully deal with a trip or move to Australia. The information is well sorted into issues and gives you the surrounding knowledge required to tackle each. For example: How do you get a car into Australia? Or use American electrical equipment? Order a beer, or migrate with your pet? Geller goes through processes like; language differences, entering the country, buying real estate and the education system, pulling the relevant information together and pointing out common pitfalls and misunderstandings you run up against when moving to a country that has so many sociological similarities. He also identifies the perplexing differences and links them comfortably back to the American vernacular. More than anything this guide gives you a gentle insight into the ways of Australia and Australians, so you are can feel out the culture and get on better, faster.

The second part is a very serviceable dictionary of Australian terms and phrases or `your cheat sheet', as Geller put it. The coverage of colloquial `Aussie lingo' is useful for any intending resident, business traveller or tourist and is an amusing read too. Have a "squiz" for yourself.

Whether you are going to spend time in Australia, or you are just thinking about it, the `Americans' Survival Guide to Australia' is worth having on your shelf and a good read to boot.

Reviewer Jack Seddon
20th October, 2007

Oceania
Antisubmarine Warrior in the Pacific: Six Subs Sunk in Twelve Days
Published in Hardcover by University Alabama Press (2005-03-06)
Author: John A. Williamson
List price: $29.95
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Untold World War II history a must for all navy vets
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-27
Being a Korean navy vet and having worked for the author 1966 to 1971, I was totally unprepared for the contents in thebook. I have passed out 20 copies to family, friends, those who have had business relationships with the author; a very successful auto dealer, direct sales marketing training systems, pioneer in computerized auto dealer accounting systems.

1960 Annopolis grauduate "best book on WWII I have ever read." 1962 destroyer electronic technician, "they still call it the Williamson turn, baseball caps on deck now uniform of the day."

May there allways be an ENGLAND
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2005-04-20
This is a wonderful book. Having met John Willaimson and some of the officers and crew of USS ENGLAND DE-635, I cannot say enough about these men, there heroes. John Willaimson had said he was working on a book when I met him in 2002 and when he passed away I was curious as to what happened to the book. I was elated to see it in print and after reading happier still! It is well written, personal, and detailed as it discusses both John Willaimson's path to the USS ENGLAND and USS ENGLAND in the Pacific at war where she sunk 6 submarines in just twelve days in 1944! This was not well publicized at the time but ENGLAND's effort was well known in the Navy, "There'll always be an ENGLAND in the United States Navy." CNO Admiral E. J. King 1944 "May there allways be an ENGLAND. Well done and congratulations to all hands." Admiral Halsey. This is a must read book. It is also imperative that an ENGLAND return to the US Navy to honor these men and this legacy.

Fascinating Story of a Remarkable Ship and Crew
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2005-04-19
The USS England (named after a sailor killed at Pearl Harbor, not after the country) was a small destroyer escort ship (DE 635 306 feet long, 1200 tons). This book is the story of her wartime career from launching in San Francisco through her nine month career. Yes, nine months, launched December 10, 1944, she fought in the South Pacific until hit by a kamikaze at Okinawa. She struggled back to the Philadelphia Navy yard and was in the process of extensive rebuilding when the war ended and such a damaged ship was no longer needed by the Navy.

The crowning point of the England's career was the record it set for killing six enemy submarines in twelve days. This was enough to make the Navy use her name on a guided-missile cruiser (CG-22) to keep the history alive.

The author was exec and then commander of the England during her short life. He writes a tale of navy life during the war that is fascinating and interesting.

Oceania
Australian Adventure (Disney's Little Einsteins)
Published in Hardcover by Hyperion Book CH (2006-09-01)
Author: Susan Ring
List price: $12.99
New price: $7.68
Used price: $3.91

Average review score:

Australian Adventure
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-13
My preschool students adore this book. The picture viewer gets them hooked from the very beginning.

Educational and Fun
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-27
My son loves to look at the viewfinder and has learned a lot from this book.

Thumbs up for Aussie Adventure
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-10
My son is 2 and loves Little Einstein. Thought the book might be a little young for him but he knows exactly what to do with the spinning circle. He just loves it

Oceania
Darkest Hour: The True Story of Lark Force at Rabaul - Australia's Worst Military Disaster of World War II
Published in Hardcover by Zenith Press (2006-12-15)
Author: Bruce Gamble
List price: $24.95
New price: $10.99
Used price: $7.42
Collectible price: $25.00

Average review score:

Gut Wrenching Tale of Australia's Worst Military Disaster of WWII
Helpful Votes: 22 out of 22 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-15
The book "Darkest Hour: The True Story of Lark Force at Rabaul" is a compelling historic accounting of those Australian men and women on the southwest Pacific island of New Britain that was run over by the invading Japanese Army. Their fateful encounter began at the early morning hour of 2:30 a.m. on January 23, 1942. The Japanese rushed ashore to completely overwhelm the 1500 men and six nurses in the garrison; thus begins one of the most tragic tales of WWII.

Less than 25% of those in the garrison were able to escape and evade and after many weeks of hardship found their way off the island to safety. However, those that remained were captured and endure cruel and sometime lethal treatment at the hands of the Japanese. In one incident alone, two hundred POWS were executed. But a worse fate was still awaiting 850 of the survivors when they were torpedoed by an American submarine and went down with the ship while locked in their holding cells below deck.

The book is obviously researched very well. Author Bruce Gamble writes this historic story as if he were an eyewitness to the events. It is a most compelling and entertaining tale that shows the courage, sacrifices and horrors of war first hand. Gamble makes us feel the emotions of that group as he shares with the reader some of the small details of the events by the people involved. The writing is top notched and goes beyond a mere reporting of what happened. It captures the heart and soul of that time and place. Reading this true story will change you; you cannot help but be moved by what happened to these men and women.

This book is one of those that once you begin reading it you do not want to pout it down until you are finished with it. I give this book my personal endorsement and highest recommendation. It has also earned The Military Writer's Society of America's top book rating of FIVE STARS! This book is more than just history--it is also a tribute to those fine soldiers and nurses of Lark Force who gave their lives for freedom.

A Heartbreaking story of heroism and tragedy in World War II
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-22
Pearl Harbor, Normandy, Stalingrad, Iwo Jima. These are just a handful of the battles that come to mind when people think about World War II--and rightfully so. Thankfully, though, Bruce Gamble extends his vision to one of the most gripping, and tragic, stories of the entire war. The story of Lark Force. Not only a true page turner (Gamble is an excellent story teller), Darkest Hour is obviously well-researched and filled with detail. Put simply, their story deserved to be told, and Bruce Gamble provided a fitting tribute to their legacy.

Lark Force
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-16
Darkest Hour is a moving book about one of Australia's least known World War Two incidents.
My grandfather died on the Montevideo Maru and for years I've searched for information about his death and his time on Rabaul. This book provided me with many answers others haven't.
Bruce Gamble writes about the members of Lark Force as real men and honestly discusses the controversy surrounding their fate.

A compelling, disturbing book that brings this darkest hour in Australian war time history into the light.

Oceania
Discoveries: Easter Island (Discoveries (Abrams))
Published in Paperback by Harry N. Abrams (1995-02-01)
Authors: Catherine Orliac and Michel Orliac
List price: $12.95
New price: $5.18
Used price: $4.79

Average review score:

Excellent
Helpful Votes: 15 out of 17 total.
Review Date: 2000-10-11
This book provides readers with many of the facts of Easter Island. I had heard about the stone statues, but had little knowledge of the history of the island. This book provided quite a bit of information on the history and covered all the theories of the statues and what they might mean and how they got there. An excellent book!

The best book to-date about Easter Island
Helpful Votes: 40 out of 44 total.
Review Date: 1997-05-01
This is a translation of "Des dieux regardent les etoiles -- Les derniers secrets de l'Ile de Paques" ("Gods gaze at the stars -- The last secrets of Easter Island"), Catherine and Michel Orliac's excellent little book about Easter Island. Easter Island and its mysteries -- from its huge statues to its strange hieroglyphics -- have been a magnet for crankery of all types, from the benign to the outrageous. How refreshing, then, it is to see such a delicious book, factual and balanced, with high-quality authentic illustrations on every page, every one of them well chosen and to the point. Almost everything you may ever want to know about Easter Island -- short of a tourist guide -- is there, with full sources and references. How so much information could have been packed in so few pages is a wonder. Complete, attractive and scholarly, this little book will appeal to all, even to the specialists. The illustrations alone are a never-ending source of wonder and delight. Highly recommended.

A Mystery and A Tragedy
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-09
Some mysteries may never be solved. Where did the Sumerian language come from? Who built the stones at Carnac and why? Who was buried in the Great Pyramid.

What do the mysterious inscriptions found at Easter Island say? And what were the stone statues for. Those are the mysteries of Easter Island.

The tragedy was what happened to the Easter Islanders. The westerners were not all evil, and the islanders themselves were not all good (e.g., they practiced human sacrifice) but the enslavement, kidnapping, rape etc. of the islanders by western maritime visitors is shocking even today. And the book tells that story too. So it is not just a book about the mysteries of Easter Island but about the almost complete destruction of it by Europeans and I am sad to say Americans.

And the two are related. If slavers had not taken hundreds of islanders to Chile to work as slaves, including the king and prince of the island, perhaps enough of the culture would have survived for western scholars to meet with those who could read the writings of the tablets. Perhaps we would really know why and how the islanders built their mysterious giants.

This book (published by Harry Abrams) is an English translation of one of a series of small, lavishly illustrated French historical guides. One really cannot go wrong with this series, whether in French or in English.

Everyone involved in this Easter Island book did a great job, and they produced a wonderful way for a beginner to learn about some of the strangest archeological sites on our planet.

Oceania
Drive-about: A Road Trip Through New Zealand and Australia
Published in Paperback by Curly Books (2003-01-23)
Author: Jeff Green
List price: $13.95
New price: $11.50
Used price: $1.85

Average review score:

Adventurous people
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-02-21
A very entertaining read about two young dare-devils. Interesting,informative and the author's dry wit is reminiscent of Bill Bryson

terrific
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-02-01
An amusing collage of adventures through New Zealand and Australia.

Colorful, adventurous, & exotic
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2003-07-25
Drive-About is an attention engaging travelogue by Jeff Green of a road trip he took that introduced him to the sights, wonders, and cultures of New Zealand and Australia. From "crazy kiwis"; to lush rainforests; to meeting Aboriginals and sampling their "witchetty grub" (the larval stage of a large moth) as a snack, Drive-About is colorful, adventurous, exotic, which is especially recommended for armchair travelers -- and would well serve as a trip-planning template for anyone contemplating vacations in Australia or New Zealand.

Oceania
Drowned Under: A tipsy tale of one American's experiences abroad in Australia
Published in Paperback by iUniverse, Inc. (2006-02-14)
Author: Derek Popp
List price: $12.95
New price: $8.09
Used price: $7.23

Average review score:

Oh, to be young again...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-12
A wonderfully entertaining memoir written by an unabashed free spirit. Popp recounts his romps through equatorial Australia in a delightfully playful narrative saturated with stories of friendships formed and loves lost. It is a great beach read!

i need to meet this author
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-11
this guy here, this popp character, someone every person should meet. at least thats how i feel after reading his book. its a great, easy read that'll keep you laughing throughout. this guy tells of his experiences while in australia for college credit, funniest thing about that: he didnt mention studying more than twice in the whole book! he is obviously a fly-by-the-seat-of-your-pants guy, which makes for hilarious antics and truly great guy book. this is totally for guys in college, guys recently graduated (i'm 26) or guys who just like being guys. and the girls will have a blast too...learning what guys actually say and do, to and about them!! i literally laughed out loud about 15 times. i couldnt put it down. it reminded me of my years in college, the things i did, the things i didnt do, and the things i should have done...in fact, i may go back to school just to have some crazy experiences like this guy!!

Drowned Under
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-12
I recently purchased this book as something to flip through on the john. As a 26 year old male I figured if I can't drink and party in Australia why not read about someone who has and maybe I will one day venture to the land down under. Little did I know how much I would actually enjoy this book. I felt like I was right there with "Dooza" tipping back pints and sharing laughs with the locals. A truly laugh out loud book. The chapter on wingman and "D.U.F.F.S is probably the funniest thing ever printed ever. Enjoy

Oceania
The Emperor's Silent Army: Terracotta Warriors of Ancient China
Published in Hardcover by Viking Juvenile (2002-04-15)
Author: Jane O'Connor
List price: $17.99
New price: $10.16
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Average review score:

Great book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-10
I bought this book to read with my daughter before we went on vacation to China and actually saw the Terra Cotta Warriors. I doesn't come close to showing how phenomenal they really are but the history is wonderful and now it's a great reminder of a wonderful trip.

Hidden arrows, Poisoned King, and Buried Treasure!
Helpful Votes: 26 out of 30 total.
Review Date: 2002-11-15
Rich with exciting historical details, The Emperor's Silent Army: Terracotta Warriors of Ancient China by Jane O'Connor offers a well-researched book that tantalizes the reader with tales of a poisoned King, a camouflaged dead body, and a booby-trapped tomb. The targeted audience of ages 9-12 will thrill with the adventure while simultaneously profiting from their newfound knowledge of China's first Emperor, Qin Shihuang, and his war and burial customs. Heavily strewn with color photographs, computer images, maps, drawings, and charts, the book easily captures interest and successfully holds attention with its succinct wording and short chapters that directly complement the images.
Jane O'Connor's career spanning roles as editor-at-large, president of mass market children's books at Penguin, and prolific author is crowned by her most recent gem, The Emperor's Silent Army: Terracotta Warriors of Ancient China. Realizing that no children's books had thoroughly documented the world wonder discovered in China, O'Connor successfully fills the void. This book is a must for any library!
The only negative aspect is that the book fails to be part of a larger history series since once the book is read, the reader will want to read more. The detailed bibliography and author's note provide a scope for further reading on the Terracotta Warriors, but readers will long to learn the same concise and tantalizing information on other subjects as well! Hopefully, Jane O'Connor will follow with more books to engage children and adults since The Emperor's Silent Army: Terracotta Warriors of Ancient China masterfully explores its subject.

The story of the 7,5000 warriors who guard Qin, China's first emperor
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-20
While on vacation in China, Jane O'Connor visited the thousands of life-sized terracotta warrior statues discovered near the tomb on an emperor in northern China. She was inspired to find out more about both the army of ghostly gray warriors and the man who had ordered their creation. But as O'Connor read everything available about the first emperor and his buried army she discovered that a book on the subject had not yet been written for children. "The Emperor's Silent Army: Terracotta Warriors of Ancient China" rectifies that mistake.

In March 1974 three farmers digging a well near the city of Xian in Lintong County of the People's Republic of China, discovered the clay head of a "pottery man." Neither the farmers nor the archaeologists who arrived to investigate the figure had ever seen anything similar to the life-like figure, and where astounded to discover dozens, and then hundreds and finally thousands of these terracotta figures. When the excavation was done, an army of 7,500 soldiers and horses has been uncovered (so far), after being buried for more than 2,200 years. The life-size figures weighed as much as four hundred pounds each and wore knee-length robes, armor made from small iron "fish scales," and elaborate topknot hairdos (the low-ranking infantrymen did not wear armor). The figures stand at attention and archaeologists also found the hundreds of real bronze swords, daggers, battle-axes, and arrowheads, these silent warriors were carrying.

After sharing the story of the discovery of the figures, O'Connor tells the story of Qin Shihuang, the divine Son of Heaven, who was the first emperor or China. Qin was a paranoid tyrant, and fearing that grave robbers would loot the treasures in his tomb after he died. O'Connor talks about the measures Qin took to protect his final resting place, which included the terracotta figures, stationed in underground trenches, less than a mile from the tomb. The details about the figures, as to why they do not wear helmets or shields and why they are facing east, are quite interesting. There is logic to their arrangement that O'Connor is able to explain, a well as the difference between the 350 chariot horses and the more than 100 cavalry horses. There are more than forty full-color photographs in the book, which help to distinguish between the different types of warriors. The only disappointment here is that there are not more such photographs.

One of the most amazing things about the figures is that of the two thousand unearthed at the time O'Connor's book was published, no two had been discovered to be the same. The figures represent different ages, different parts of China, and even different temperaments. A colored computer image shows how one of the figures would have looked originally when it was painted. Another fascinating section has to do with modern artisans making replicas, following the techniques of 2,200 years ago, to help archeologists understand how the original figures were created. The final chapters of the book are devoted to what it was like inside the Emperor's tomb, where the body may be wearing a jade funeral suit (the government has no intention of actually opening the tomb and looking, but other tombs have been opened in the past to five us some ideas), and Qin's legacy, which is mainly the first Great Wall of China that he had made with a workforce of half a million slave laborers working for a dozen years. However, it would be Qin's silent army that is probably most responsible for what immortality the first emperor possesses today. Seeing them in person would be an unforgettable experience, and O'Connor's book does an excellent job of making that impression on her readers, young and old alike.

Oceania
The Fight for the Malvinas: The Argentine Forces in the Falklands War
Published in Hardcover by Viking Adult (1989-08-10)
Author: Martin Middlebrook
List price: $24.95
New price: $106.47
Used price: $5.58
Collectible price: $25.00

Average review score:

A Rare and Valuable Glimpse Into the Argentine Perspective
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2000-04-29
Prior to the publication of this book there were important gaps and inaccuracies in our understanding of the battles for the Falkland Islands. Were Argentinian ground troops cowardly slackards? Were their officers self-serving and tactically incompetent? Was a British officer attempting negotiation under a white flag at Goose Green intentionally fired upon? Was the Argentinian Air Force commanded by a political bureaucrat? The surprising answer to all these question is No, and in a careful and touchingly human review of the activities and decisions of Argentinian forces Middlebrook reveals the tragic gap that developed between Argentinian political leaders and the troops and officers given the difficult task of defending the islands without adequate support as winter closed in. The junta's colossal mistake of assuming the UK would not fight for the Falklands led to the isolation, suffering, and defeat of the occupation forces and, while ultimately setting the stage for democracy in Argentina, seared a painful wound into the soul of a country already conscious of past failures. Middlebrook's access to Argentinian commanders, troops, and families helps reveal the complex social and political landscape of a country which still sees the "Malvinas" in terms of classical European colonialism. It also reveals the operational planning and situational understanding of air and land commanders at critical points in the conflict.

A Rare and Valuable Glimpse Into the Argentine Perspective
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2000-04-29
Prior to the publication of this book there were important gaps and inaccuracies in our understanding of the battles for the Falkland Islands. Did Argentinian troops intentionally fire upon a British officer attempting negotiation under a white flag at Goose Green? Were Royal Marines successful in their ambush of Argentinian armored vehicles during the initial invasion? Was the Argentinian Air Force commanded by a fanatical maniac out to establish his service as the dominant domestic political force? The surprising answer to all these question is No, and in a careful and touchingly human review of the activities and decisions of Argentinian forces Middlebrook reveals the tragic gap that developed between Argentinian political leaders and the troops and officers given the difficult task of defending the islands without adequate support as winter closed in. The junta's colossal mistake of assuming the UK would not fight for the Falklands led to the isolation, suffering, and defeat of the occupation forces and, while ultimately setting the stage for democracy in Argentina, seared a painful wound into the soul of a country already carrying conscious of past failures. Middlebrook's access to Argentinian commanders, troops, and families helps reveal the complex social and political landscape of a country which still sees the "Malvinas" in terms of classical European colonialism. It also reveals the operational planning and situational understanding of air and land commanders at critical points in the conflict. Students of this subject will recognize the author as a highly accomplished battle historian.

Excellent and Interesting Account
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 1999-12-26
Martin Middlebrook has once again shown why he is one of the best British authors covering military history. His masterful account of the Falklands, 'Operation Corporate' now has a companion volume, this time covering the war from the Argentinian point of view. The book is well told and is a delight to read and only one of very few covering this war from the 'other side'. You really have to give it to the pilots flying their aircraft against the Britsh Fleet, they had guts, they knew what they were in for but continued with their mission. This is a great story, if you can get a copy do so, you wont be disappointed!

Oceania
The forgotten one,: And other true tales of the South Seas
Published in Hardcover by Little, Brown (1952)
Author: James Norman Hall
List price:
Used price: $42.50

Average review score:

The Forgotten one
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-11-29
After reading this book ,The Forgotten One , I had begun a search of other books of this type. The forgotten one had such an effect that I began a journey, physically, to find out more of this lifestyle and ended up living in the south pacific for a period of 18 months. Once you read this book , it may effect you in such a way , that the mundane , the'normal' the monetary , no longer is good enough , and you too may start a life in search of the Romance that is provided only in the islands of palm fringed lagoons that only exist in the South Pacific. I rate this book as my favourite , for it is written from the heart in a simlpe to 'appreciate' way of life that exists outside that of the big cities

stories of expats lost in the South Seas
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-04-10
This was Hall's last book, a collection of six short stories about Americans and Europeans he knew personally during his years on Tahiti. The title story, The Forgotten One, is probably the most interesting. Written half a century ago, it tells the tale of an Englishman who couldn't come to terms with own sexuality and fled to a remote atoll in the Tuamotu Islands to be alone. The story seems strange today when gays are largely accepted, but during the 1950s such cases were plausible. The final story in the collection, Frisbie of Danger Island, is an annotated series of letters Hall received from his good friend, Robert Dean Frisbie, or 'Ropati' as the Cook Islanders called him. Frisbie's one literary success, The Book of Pukapuka, can be ordered through this website. Hall's story chronicles Frisbie's years of poverty and rejected manuscripts, as well as his famous experience of a hurricane on Suwarrow Atoll. By the way, if you'll be visiting Tahiti, a James Norman Hall Museum opened recently in his original home at Arue just outside Papeete. If you've read any of his books, the museum is a must.

James Norman Hall, an unreckognized essayist of our century
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1999-01-16
This collection of stories of the eastern tropical pacific is, along with Under a Thatched Roof by the same author a book that I have ended up reading again and again since I first read them as a teenager. The frantic world dips under the horizon as you can lose yourself in the remote world of French Polynesia in the 20's and 30's. The cold hard world of steel and inanity melts into the warmth of a tropical night of soft breezes and oh so many stars. The Forgotten One is about a man so troubled by his difference from other men that he goes to incredible lengths to avoid all but his old servant Ling Foo and an elderly Tuamotuan woman. Anyone who has felt this estrangement should read about Crichton. There is another story of a happy sort about a Chinese family of Tahiti that befriends the author because of his simple gift of a few American seeds. The last tale is about another interesting character and author of the South Seas- Robert Dean Frisbee. He might not have had an easy life, but good lord, what adventure. Read these and other essays by James Norman Hall and see if you aren't glad that you shared this earth with this gentle and perceptive soul. Bob


Books-Under-Review-->Recreation-->Outdoors-->Hunting-->Taxidermists-->Oceania-->7
Related Subjects: New Zealand Australia
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