Australia Books
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Collectible price: $525.00

VERY WELL DONE !Review Date: 2001-09-21
fabulous work about a fabulous starReview Date: 1998-11-21
Leigh and MeReview Date: 2000-12-19
it did mine.
BrilliantReview Date: 1999-06-17
Bowery was one of the greatest designers; this is his workReview Date: 1999-03-27
Bamber Delver, Amsterdam - the Netherlands journalist/writer (1984; Bowery at Farell House) website under construction with Bowery-department a.o. interview, articles, unknown pics

Used price: $11.98

LP guidebooks are usually great, and this is even better !Review Date: 2003-03-03
Eight years on, this edition remains the best guide to PNG!Review Date: 2006-11-18
While this book was never perfect, and I would only have rated it 4 stars even when it was brand new (because its coverage of certain areas is really sketchy, and it curiously ignores some long-established budget places to stay), the new "PNG & Solomon Islands" guide that was published in 2005 to replace it is so much worse that it makes this guide seem 5*+ in comparision.
While the new guide is almost totally written for those going to PNG to stay in ultra-expensive resorts and see the country on guided tours, this 1998 edition still has the usual, more backpacker-oriented style many readers expect from LP guides. It will tell you about budget places to stay, remote areas to explore, and in general give you ideas on getting off the beaten track and experience some of the best PNG has to offer on your own.
Of course you will find that prices have risen considerably in the past years, but once in PNG, you will quickly figure out quite how much (they are up 2-3 times in Kina terms, which means much less an increase in foreign currency).
There are also a few new (mostly upmarket) places to stay now, and some shipping routes have changed (even since the 2005 edition!).
So if you are obsessed with having the latest available information in your guide, you may also want to buy the new edition in addition to this one.
I have both, but if I had to pick only one to carry along on my next trip to PNG, I would definitely take this one.
THE guidebook for PNGReview Date: 2002-08-07
I was traveling in 2000 for about 8 weeks in PNG and found the book a real help for getting around in a country that is far away from being touristy. Whether you are looking for a bus stop, the next spots for hiking or diving, hotel information or information on culture and religion this book has it all in detail.
Especially in this kind of less developed country every bit and piece of information in this book is worth every cent you spent for it.
The perfect travel guide for an incredible locationReview Date: 2000-09-15
Lonely Planet has again done a superb job combining art, graphics, maps and information in exactly the right proportions. There are a collection of excellent color and black & white photos and graphics. The history and cultural background is extensive owing to the three experienced traveler-writers. They make great use of side-bars to highlight special features and information (a trade mark of most Lonely Planet materials).
All the regions are treated pretty equally and include useful maps that otherwise would be tough to find anywhere.
If you could only buy one book in preparation for your trip, you would not have any problem making this your "Bible". It is also a great size at 5 x 7.25 x 5/8's inches and printed on high quality paper.
I will always look to Lonely Planet as my first choice in travel books.
This book helped guarantee my most hassle free adventure !Review Date: 1997-10-02


Finally a solid book on Jurchen/Manchu history!Review Date: 2007-06-04
This book takes all that mythology and anti-Manchu rehtoric and blasts it to pieces with a compelling story of a people who have rarely been studied objectively and as a culture separate from the Mongols and Chinese. Nurgaci was not the man of the myths we've heard and never called himself Emperor. In fact for most of his life his title was "beile of the Jianzhou Jurchens". He was a great lord and chieftain of his lineage, but not even an autocrat in his authority, ruling jointly with his brother, Surgaci, for many years.
Besides the myths about Nuragi, many cultural myths are also dispelled. One major one is the assumption that the Manchus were nomads with a steppe culture analogous to the Mongol culture. This book explains how and why this assumption is wrong and is essential to anyone who wants to know the real Manchu people.
I'm only 3 chapters into the book and already know I need to reread it. there's a lot of information for the student of Jurchen and Manchu history!
WELL DONE!!
Packs a punchReview Date: 2004-03-12
Crossley's book is highly recommended for both casual & serious historians alike. My suggestion is to read this first before Rawski's "The Last Emperors"
There is a more updated bookReview Date: 2001-09-28
I have decided not to change the rating on this book in the interest of fair play.
Not an academic bookReview Date: 2002-05-17
Surprisingly relevantReview Date: 1998-05-14

Used price: $6.92

Highly original mystery from AustraliaReview Date: 2008-09-01
Author Adrian Hyland has fashioned a complex mystery story that does not sort itself until the final pages of the book. Meanwhile, protagonist Emily Tempest, travels many miles through the outback trying to find the murderer of an old family friend who was the revered leader of a small Aboriginal band trying to reestablish its traditional way of life in a wasteland oasis. The problems that Aboriginal people have living between European settlements and traditional encampments are well and sympathetically laid out as the story line uncoils.
The author thankfully provides a glossary of Aboriginal and Australian words and idioms at the outset of the book and be forewarned--you will have to access those references frequently until well into the book. This is an intelligent and interesting novel with a good mystery core that any reader of the genre will appreciate greatly.
Finally, kudos to SOHO Crime for continuing to delivery excellent international mysteries to the American market.
A first-rate mystery with a first-class protagonist, and it all takes place in the Australian outbackReview Date: 2008-04-15
When Lincoln Flinders is found dead, killed in a gruesome manner that might make some think the murderer is a blackfeller, Emily decides it couldn't have been that way. Her decision to investigate is complicated by the plans some of the whites in Bluebush have to develop Moonlight Downs whether the aboriginal owners like it or not. Emily eventually figures things out, but not before the author, Adrian Hyland, has given us a straightforward and engrossing look at life in the outback, both among the aboriginal groups and the whites. He manages this with clear and even evocative language that doesn't fall back on poetic descriptions of aboriginal life or rugged outback beauty. Dreams and Diamond Doves play a part, but with a casual and unromantic acceptance of how people believe in things.
Adrian Hyland is a first-rate writer. He brings us into Emily Tempest's life and times with a minimum of fuss. His descriptions are vivid but restrained. This works because he knows what he's talking about and because he knows how to create characters we can imagine for ourselves. Emily Tempest, somewhere in her late twenties, has been drifting around for several years. She drinks, she rolls her own and her mouth sparks out with casual obscenities. She knows how to live in the bush, identify rocks and how to keep drunks in line while she serves booze at her temporary job in town. She can take care of herself. She's also thoughtful, sometimes impetuous and likes to read. Her bonded relationship with Hazel Flinders is complex.
As much as Moonlight Downs is a fascinating look at outback life amongst the blackfellers and the whitefellers, and as much as Hyland has created an intriguing lead character in Emily Tempest, more than anything else Hyland has written a fine mystery. You need to pay attention while reading this book. There's a lot going on with more than one or two plausible theories behind the murder of Lincoln Flinders. And Hyland keeps the plot honest. Most of what we learn either drives to the solution or creates reasonable alternatives. As with enjoying any good mystery, it pays to be a bit suspicious of reasonable explanations. Hyland also handles the need for a solid flash finish. The last six fairly short chapters place Emily and then Emily and Hazel in the middle of brutal killings, mistaken assumptions, desperate chases and a stand-up resolve by Emily not to give the killer an ounce of satisfaction...all in the heat and rocky outcrops of the outback. It's quite a scene, and leads to an entirely satisfying conclusion. I'm looking forward to Emily Tempest's next appearance.
A new voiceReview Date: 2008-02-08
Interesting Australian thrillerReview Date: 2008-02-10
She is stunned when Lincoln is found dead, a strangulation victim. Even more shocking is the killer carved out his kidney. The locals assume sorcerer Blakie Japanangka murdered and then mutilated the body of the camp's leader. Emily assists police sergeant Tom McGillivray in trying to find Blakie, who has vanished. When information surfaces that makes the prime suspect look innocent, Emily looks into a land dispute as the motive for killing Lincoln with the organ removal used to throw blame on the aborigine sorcerer.
This is an interesting look at the aborigine culture from the perspective of a person who had one foot in that and one in the white Australian society before she became a globetrotter. Emily is the strength of the story line as her relationship with Hazel seems to be a microcosm of the two groups. Although the whodunit especially when it detours into an avarice land deal seems a stretch and lacks suspense, readers will enjoy this insightful visit to the Outback.
Harriet Klausner
A precious gem of a book not to be missedReview Date: 2008-01-12
There are other issues raised in the book. The inevitable clash of cultures and lack of understanding that results. Conflicting interests of farming, mining and aboriginal land claims, the politicization of these interests and the odd mix of people who seem to be attracted to such remote areas. The real achievement that Hyland has managed to pull off is the fact that he vividly portrays all these aspects of life in the outback without making any judgements and without trying to push the reader down the path towards a particular opinion. He leaves that entirely up to the individual.
Hyland has also injected a wonderful dry humour into the book. Expressions such as "rough as emus knees", "he belonged to the von Ribbentrop school of negotiation" and "been taking deportment lessons from a Rottweiler" are genuinely funny. The author also has a gift for description; " Gladys herself was a battleship on stilts. She wasn't much older than me, but she'd exploded in every direction. She was immensely tall, immensely fat, wearing a green dress and a coiffure that looked like it had been fashioned with a splitting axe."

Used price: $0.71
Collectible price: $29.95

Must read.Review Date: 2007-02-04
A Family History - well worth the effort.Review Date: 2004-04-29
Simply the best Holocaust narrative.Review Date: 2001-10-19
The strength of "Mosaic" is it's breadth and it's protagonists, the author's family. The central family, that of Daniel & Lieba Baldinger & their 11 children is augmented by cousins on the maternal side (the Spira's) as well as the family of Ms. Armstrong's mother, the Bratters. Although Poland is the setting for the first 30 years or so, as WWII beckons the scope becomes the entire continent of Europe as the now-adult children of Daniel & Lieba pursue their lives.
The majority of the family is caught in Nazi-controlled Poland & thru various ruses attempts to escape being deported to the death camps. These are the most thrilling sections of "Mosaic" because Ms. Armstrong's writing is so vivid that the reader can feel the never-ending fear that she & her family lived with for years. While she & her parents live as Catholics in a small Polish village, her aunt & young cousins are standing behind a wardrobe for days at a time in Krakow; we experience both types of anxiety as well as many others as the author recounts the many ruses various family members undertook to survive.
There were family members outside of Poland during WWII as well. With 2 uncles in France, another uncle who moved his family from Belgium thru Spain to finally end in Rio de Janeiro & various aunts & cousins everywhere from Andorra to Tel Aviv the reader is treated to a kaleidoscope of war experiences. The post-war years & family diaspora is dealt with in detail also.
What makes "Mosaic" especially memorable for me is that nobody is a "hero" or does "historic deeds" at any point in the book. While most Holocaust memoirs are by individuals who somehow stood out from the crowd, this account is of the members of that crowd, the folks who by simply surviving without compromising themselves became heroes. It is a marvelous reminder that everyone has a story worth telling.
The final chapter, in which Diane Armstrong & her daughter Justine return to Poland & reunite with the priest who befriended & helped her family shines with joy & compassion. I truly hope that Father Roman Soszynski had the opportunity to read this book. I hope that you will read it as well.
A truly amazing storyReview Date: 2002-07-17
MOSAICReview Date: 2001-07-31

Track this one down!Review Date: 2008-08-28
Although the illustrations aren't as gorgeous as some of his other books (more of a scratchy/pencil/diff medium style) and every 2-page split is not colorized, they still work perfectly with the story. Really fun read, especially if you've got an eccentric gran/nana in your family.
A beautifully illustrated multicultural animal book.Review Date: 1999-08-01
Billiantly BeautifulReview Date: 1999-10-23
Recommend t for everyone, young and old.
Wonderful Fun Book! Clever wording.Review Date: 2003-04-22
"...Near Bandywallop East..."Review Date: 2006-07-28
Near Bandywallop East,
A fair way north of Murrumbum
(Five hundred miles at least)...
In Sydney and in Melbourne Town,
They all knew Grandma's name,
And all about the animals,
That Grandma used to tame.
THe Australian place names and the premise of the Grandma taming exotic animals (exotic to most non-Australians kids) is as colorful as Grame Base's 11 2-page spreads. The story concerns Grandma (while we're told that everyone "knew her name," we're never told what it is), her taming, training, and befriending of wombats, kangaroos, dingos, goannas and local birds, including kookaburras, galahs, magpies, and coots. The color pictures are beautiful and often wonderfully improbable: A goanna (some kind of reptile) is shown in an easy cair, quaffing some type of drink (Foster's?), while he and a dingo (wild dog) watch a rat balance an Australian coin.
After introducing the animals who overrun Grandma's house, Base's brief plot concerns Grandma's journey (via pelican) over the desert sands and mountins, "until at dusk they reached a place, Where giant tree-ferns grew. There's a lush picture of this riverbank oasis, followed by a dark, fun/scary night illustration of the wombats--their eyes open in fear--"looking nervously around...for a wombat-eating snake." Grandma and pelican journey to next to the sea, where she dons "frilly bathing gear," and rides the waves on a blowup sea-dragon.
HOwever, things take an unexpected turn when Base decides that Grandma will be taken by the tide: "ANnd no-one's seen my Grandma/Even to this very day." This sudden disappearance is tempered by the narrator's speculation that Grandma probably landed on an island and thence to England , Spain, San Francisco, or Tingoor, or (her best bet), that Grandma's "back in Gooligulch, just like before." While the fantasy elements of the book make Grandma's fate less important, and the narrator's speculation more plausible, this turn of events may make the book somewhat unsettling for toddlers, restricting the book's audience to those around the ages 4-9 or so. You'll have to use your judgement. There's no hint that Grandma had a disaster, she pictured (in the narrator's fantasy taming animals "in thejungles of Tingoor" an d heading to San Francisco "On a Western Union train." Still, you might want to consider whrther the ambiguity of what happened to Grandma will be upsetting to your readers. Still, in keeping with the light, silly narrative poem (which is very imaginative and well-written), I think a zanier, more explicit conclusion would have been a better fit.
The other non-color picture are a monochromatic dark brown, made interesting by Base's lined shadings. Unfortunately, these are sometimes too dense, his most effective picture leave more "white space." In addition, Base introduces some of the animals without a nearby reference illustration: You have to go to the inside of the front cover to get the key to the two-page illustration of all the animals located inside the back cover! This is a little inconvenient. Overall, a very good book, with excellent color illustrations, and a clever poetic narrative that will draw engage individuals kids or in group reading.

Used price: $80.88

The best landscape photo compilationReview Date: 2008-01-13
Wow. Wow.Review Date: 2004-04-08
I just returned from 3-weeks in New Zealand and I must have looked at 30 NZ published photo albums before I left, settling on "New Zealand Landscapes." The US price for this NZ published book is a little steep, but it beats the pants off anything else I saw.
Truly AmazingReview Date: 2006-02-04
This book is my favorite collection of photographs, period. The photographs are technically perfect and do justice to a landscape that itself is almost indescribable. Whenever I pick up this book, I know that I'll be sacrificing an hour because I just cannot put it down.
Thank you Mr. Apse.
Stunning Images!!Review Date: 2004-05-29
Even if you've never been to New Zealand, I highly recommend this title as a thoroughly enjoyable work of art!
Brilliant photos!Review Date: 2003-10-29

Collectible price: $15.00

A favorite of my daughterReview Date: 2008-09-18
The rhythm and patterns of the writing, and the pictures all make it a great book for counting and reading. And having mastered numerals already, she loves learning the word forms (the book always uses "one", "two" etc, not 1, 2).
Learn to Count to 14 With The Help of a Wide Range of Australian Wildlife With this 1982 Classic Learning ToolReview Date: 2007-11-17
The friends the reader will meet to help them count along with a wombat are, koalas, magpies, kangaroos, platypuses, possums, emus, echidnas. goannas, kookaburras, dingos, cockatoos, hopping mice and seals. Illustrations of these animals (with the exception of the wombat) are very realistic looking as well.
If more of an actual story you were after other great Australian wildlife fiction picture book classics that kids all over the world will love are out there. The best are Possum Magic and Hunwick's Egg by Mem Fox. Sebastian Lives in a Hat by Thelma Catterwell, Wombat Stew by Marcia Vaughan, the entire Steve Parish story book collection by Rebecca Johnson such as The Cranky Crocodile are also great reads. Olga the Brolga and Edward the Emu although not the best stories have some greatest drawn colourful illustrations of Australian wildlife you will ever see.
A witty and colourful Australian childrens bookReview Date: 1997-09-27
Modern Australian classicReview Date: 2000-05-02
and so on to fourteen A now-classic Australian counting book, featuring native animals and other features of the Australian landscape and lifestyle (bush, lamingtons, and some flora)
A good choice for a counting book (also going beyond the traditional 10) for Aussie and non-Aussie kids alike.
Every Kid Loves A Wombat!Review Date: 2001-02-09

Used price: $24.59

Better than the FirstReview Date: 2002-07-28
Stunning Photographic Work in AdvertisingReview Date: 2001-12-09
This book eye candy to me.
Quantel Paintbox ArtistryReview Date: 2000-01-28
Collection of Good Examples of Digital Image ManipulationReview Date: 2001-06-14
I am also intending to get "Paintbox No. 2" !!
Eyecatching Effects and Stunning IdeasReview Date: 2001-12-01
If you are in advertising and designing, it would be a great challenge to yourself to try to produce similar effects in the book. Or if you are just looking for a book that shows you great pictures in advertising, you will find this book to be an eye-candy. However, this book does not teach you how to produce the effects; which, I think is not the aim of the book.
I am happy to have a copy of this book.

hard to findReview Date: 2000-06-24
Garrett for Australian President!Review Date: 2003-03-02
Garrett is passionate, prophetic and coherent. His argument is timeless. Further more, it shows Australian politics has changed little in nearly 20 years.
Wow!Review Date: 1999-04-10
Brilliant! Straight forward, honest, to the point. Find it!Review Date: 1998-12-14
Extremely hard to find, but closer than you thinkReview Date: 2003-08-12
- An Oils fan.
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