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The Ghost Mountain Boys: Their Epic March and the Terrifying Battle for New Guinea---The Forgotten War of the South Pacific
Published in Audio CD by Tantor Media (2007-11-26)
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"Gost Mountain Boys" DVD
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-29
Review Date: 2008-06-29
Ghost Mountain Boys Remembered
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-25
Review Date: 2008-04-25
Along with the great U.S. sacrifices at Iwo Jima, a little known action of Americans and Australians fought well dug-in Japanese forces in Papua, New Guinea. The green troops of the 32nd Division (Wisconsin and Michigan men) withstood the withering fire from the Japanese, the plague of malaria and jungle rot, and the complete misunderstanding of the state of affairs by MacArthur. They crossed over on foot the nearly impassable Owen Stanley Mountains, referred by them as Ghost Mountain, only to be met with chest deep swamps, flesh cutting grass while an invisible enemy poured machinegun fire onto them.
With the greatest of efforts, the Ghost Mountain Boys surmounted all the obstacles, both natural and human, at a great price in blood and death. Only after the conclusion of the action did the American high command come to realize what the facts were concerning the conditions the 32nd had to face.
Although I know of no monuments in Washington commemorating this event, readers should know about the Ghost Mountain Boys and other lesser known actions that didn't make the newsreels. Their sacrifices were as real as those that made the headlines.
With the greatest of efforts, the Ghost Mountain Boys surmounted all the obstacles, both natural and human, at a great price in blood and death. Only after the conclusion of the action did the American high command come to realize what the facts were concerning the conditions the 32nd had to face.
Although I know of no monuments in Washington commemorating this event, readers should know about the Ghost Mountain Boys and other lesser known actions that didn't make the newsreels. Their sacrifices were as real as those that made the headlines.
The Ghost Mountain Boys
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-08
Review Date: 2008-04-08
Great book. I couldnt put it down. Well written. Anyone interested in history should read this. DR
Jungle War on a Shoestring!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-05
Review Date: 2008-04-05
This book is an easy read. I recommend it to anyone interested in how America's citizen soldiers fought in World War II. The book's style is similar to many of Stephen Ambroses works such as Band of Brothers: E Company, 506th Regiment, 101st Airborne from Normandy to Hitler's Eagle's Nest or Citizen Soldiers: The U. S. Army from the Normandy Beaches to the Bulge to the Surrender of Germany.
This book follows the story of the 32 Infantry, the Red Arrow Division in Early World War II. The Red Arrow Division was composed of National Guard units from Michigan and Wisconsin and fleshed out with draftees. The unit was nationalized in 1941, before the beginning of the war and trained in Louisiana. The first section of the book focuses on these early days of the division.
The Red Arrow was originally slated to fight in Europe but with rapid advance of the Japanese, the Red Arrow was sent to protect Australia. Soon after the division completed construction of its training base, units were sent to help Australian troops in New Guinea. Several units marched over the Owen Stanley Mountains racing the Japanese back to their bases near Buna on the northern coast. Coastal shipping transported other units to the area. The account of the air attack on these ships as they tried to land supplies was gripping. None of the troops were trained or prepared for the tropical jungles and harsh conditions they faced. Niether was the United States prepared to supply troop in this environment. The troops were malnourished and soon suffered from tropical diseases such as malaria and dysentery. Trapped at the end of a long supply line before the industrial strength of the United States was brought to bear, this small band fought a battle in the jungle similar to trench warfare in World War 1.
This book focuses on the personal experiences of the front line troops in their struggle against the environment and enemy. Excerpts from Japanese diaries show that both sides suffered terribly from the conditions, which neither side was prepared for. Distant commanders demanded immediate action and that the attacks be pressed forward regardless of losses. I am amazed that the sick emaciated troops were able to walk let alone fight. I wished for more maps. Three maps at the beginning of the book meant that I was constantly turning back to the front to see if the location was on the map and where it was. The campaign in the Southwestern Pacific is almost ignored by the public who remember the Marine landings in the Central Pacific and the great carrier battles that destroyed the Japanese Navy.
I drive home from work every day on the Red Arrow Highway. When I moved here, I asked about the name and was told that it was named for a famous unit in World War I made up of local boys. Someone else told me that the Red Arrow was in combat longer than any other unit in WW II. I don't think of them the same way as I did before I read this book.
This book follows the story of the 32 Infantry, the Red Arrow Division in Early World War II. The Red Arrow Division was composed of National Guard units from Michigan and Wisconsin and fleshed out with draftees. The unit was nationalized in 1941, before the beginning of the war and trained in Louisiana. The first section of the book focuses on these early days of the division.
The Red Arrow was originally slated to fight in Europe but with rapid advance of the Japanese, the Red Arrow was sent to protect Australia. Soon after the division completed construction of its training base, units were sent to help Australian troops in New Guinea. Several units marched over the Owen Stanley Mountains racing the Japanese back to their bases near Buna on the northern coast. Coastal shipping transported other units to the area. The account of the air attack on these ships as they tried to land supplies was gripping. None of the troops were trained or prepared for the tropical jungles and harsh conditions they faced. Niether was the United States prepared to supply troop in this environment. The troops were malnourished and soon suffered from tropical diseases such as malaria and dysentery. Trapped at the end of a long supply line before the industrial strength of the United States was brought to bear, this small band fought a battle in the jungle similar to trench warfare in World War 1.
This book focuses on the personal experiences of the front line troops in their struggle against the environment and enemy. Excerpts from Japanese diaries show that both sides suffered terribly from the conditions, which neither side was prepared for. Distant commanders demanded immediate action and that the attacks be pressed forward regardless of losses. I am amazed that the sick emaciated troops were able to walk let alone fight. I wished for more maps. Three maps at the beginning of the book meant that I was constantly turning back to the front to see if the location was on the map and where it was. The campaign in the Southwestern Pacific is almost ignored by the public who remember the Marine landings in the Central Pacific and the great carrier battles that destroyed the Japanese Navy.
I drive home from work every day on the Red Arrow Highway. When I moved here, I asked about the name and was told that it was named for a famous unit in World War I made up of local boys. Someone else told me that the Red Arrow was in combat longer than any other unit in WW II. I don't think of them the same way as I did before I read this book.
The Reality of what these men went through.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-30
Review Date: 2008-03-30
I bought this book only because I personally met one the men in it after the book was written. I'm not a WWII buff, but this book kept me interested while I read what these GIs were thinking, saying, and doing before their time in battle and during the worst of it. I don't doubt this was an unique time with extra-ordinary men and women sacraficing for our freedoms. A good read for anyone, even if history and war are not your interests.

The Great Shame: And The Triumph Of The Irish In The English -Speaking World
Published in Hardcover by Nan A. Talese (1999-09-14)
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An engrossing account
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-02
Review Date: 2006-10-02
This account of Australia and Ireland tells a fantastic story, weaving in events of the 19th century with the men who fought for Ireland and were shipped as prisoners to Australia. It is often a sad story, but certainly holds one's intereat. Some of the mistakes in the book can be attributed I suppose to the auhor's lack of familiarity with U.S. politics. I confess I was disturbed by Keneally's frequent use of the word "Democrat" as an adjective. I thought everybody knew that the adjective is "Democratic", NOT "Democrat." "Democrat" is a noun. This mistake must appear at least 25 times in the book, and one wonders where his proofreaders were. Other mistakes are minor by comparison. On page 258 he discribes Lewis Cass as a Senator from Ohio, whereas he was actually a Senator from Michigan. On the same page he says James Shields was first a Senator from Minnesota. The fact is Shields was first a Senator from Illinois, then a Senator from Minnesota, and finally a Senator from Missouri--the only person ever to be a United States Senator from three different states.
Three Books in One
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-27
Review Date: 2006-08-27
This is really three books in one: 1) the story of humble James Larkin of Lismany, Co. Galway 2) the story of James Meagher and Young Ireland and 3) the story of the Fenians of the later 19th century.
Author Thomas Keneally does a noteworthy job in writing all three narratives and integrating them to the degree possible -- which is some but not much. A more accurate title might be "Three Profiles in Irish Deportation" as this is what the principal subjects have in common.
With such a sprawling set of geographies and subjects, editing this book into a narrative must have been quite a challenge. But with the major support which Mr. Kinneally's earlier works have earned, the editing job is accomplished with good results.
I recommend this book to anyone who would like to learn about Judicial Transportation to Australia, the Irish Brigade of the American Civil War, and the Young Ireland movement, or just more about 19th century Ireland in general.
Author Thomas Keneally does a noteworthy job in writing all three narratives and integrating them to the degree possible -- which is some but not much. A more accurate title might be "Three Profiles in Irish Deportation" as this is what the principal subjects have in common.
With such a sprawling set of geographies and subjects, editing this book into a narrative must have been quite a challenge. But with the major support which Mr. Kinneally's earlier works have earned, the editing job is accomplished with good results.
I recommend this book to anyone who would like to learn about Judicial Transportation to Australia, the Irish Brigade of the American Civil War, and the Young Ireland movement, or just more about 19th century Ireland in general.
A portrait of a people's tragedy and triumph!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-29
Review Date: 2006-07-29
I thought the strong point of Thomas Keneally's brilliant work The Great Shame was his ability to capture the personalities of the various characters as well as the persistent, hardheaded, determined nature of the Irish in general. It is amazing how so often this scandalous treatment akin to genocide of the Irish is forgotten by history in general. Keneally has done a service to all to recount so accurately the destruction and resurrection of a people. Highly recommended!
Long, detailed, and worthwhile
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-09
Review Date: 2003-05-09
Thomas Keneally's The Great Shame was very well documented and extremely detailed and vivid but twice as long as many contemporary histories (605 pages of text). A commitment is needed to follow the story of the Ribbonmen, Fenians and the Young Ireland Movement; the trial of William Smith O'Brien; the deportation of political prisoners to Australia; the amazing story of General Thomas Meagher of the US Union army; and the sad story of John Michell, a Confederate.
The Irish Are survivors
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2003-10-24
Review Date: 2003-10-24
Keneally's book will be a classic.He has captured the Irish Diaspora as none could do better.This is a huge story covering time,places, politics,love,hate,family,oppression,wars,peace;but through it all the determination of a race to survive.
Keneally writes so well that he makes it seem that he was right there all the time and that you are travelling right along with him.
Even the Irish ,however you want to define what is Irish,will find that the spread and influence of the Irish is far greater than ever realized.
After so many other's attempts it took an Australian of Keneally's stature to write the story so well.
So many resort to fiction to tell a story,but Keneally tells the story magnificently and does it with facts.
Keneally writes so well that he makes it seem that he was right there all the time and that you are travelling right along with him.
Even the Irish ,however you want to define what is Irish,will find that the spread and influence of the Irish is far greater than ever realized.
After so many other's attempts it took an Australian of Keneally's stature to write the story so well.
So many resort to fiction to tell a story,but Keneally tells the story magnificently and does it with facts.

Hitler's Daughter
Published in Library Binding by HarperCollins (2003-06-01)
List price: $16.89
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Average review score: 

Evaluation of Book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-01
Review Date: 2008-05-01
This creative book examines the moral obligation that people have when others are going against your own morals. The story is blended with facts about World War 1, World War 2, and the work camps that were places throughout Germany. These facts add to the story, which create an authentic and accurate description of what people during the war experienced, yet it is easy for the reader to distinguish between fact and fiction. Throughout the book, the children discuss Hitler and his regime when talking to each other and adults. This information is later used when the Anna is creating the story about Heidi. The story expressed how many Germans blamed non-Germans, particularly the Jews, for Germany's economic failure after World War 1, and how Hitler used this hatred to create his empire. The story also shows the reverse side, those who disagreed with Hitler and his regime because they had no hatred for other, had family members taken away, and the fear that came along when one talks negatively about the Nazi regime. The dialogue between characters conveyed the period by discussing situations that were going on at that time and incorporating German words and dictum. Hitler's speeches were also mentioned in the book, which showed the strength and leadership he once had. The book does provide insight about today's problems, especially when Mark was listening to the radio and was shocked to hear that genocide against races still occur now. Mark does not understand why people are creating death and destruction since they know about Hitler and his mistakes. This book is intended for grades four through six, but can certainly be used through grade eight. This book can be read at home, or in class through independent, shared, or whole class instruction. This would be a great book to use when discussing the Holocaust. This book would also make a great read aloud for students since the class can have many discussions about the contents of the book, which may also include multiple inference questions. Teachers can incorporate a variety of instruction ideas including journals, K-W-L charts, cause and effect charts, and literature circles. One possible problem would be student's confusion about the existence of Heidi. Some students may confuse themselves by believing that Heidi was a real person. This can be avoided by reinforcing the plot of the story and reminding the students how Anna and the other characters are creating Heidi for their story game.
Story within a story...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-19
Review Date: 2008-01-19
The format of this book is rather interesting. The main characters are Mark - a modern Australian teenager - and Heidi, Hitler's daughter. Mark knows of Heidi as the character in a story his friend Anna is making up.
Anna begins this story as a way to pass time while the kids are waiting for the bus. Heidi is Hitler's un-acknowledged daughter. She's imperfect - not blonde and beautiful - so she's not a candidate for the arian race. But she loves her daddy, and he loves her in his way.
Mark listens to this story and as he does, a change occurs in him. He starts to consider Point Of View. The questions come - what if My Dad were evil? Would I see that? If I did, would I challenge him?
Beyond the captivating story that Anna tells, the transformation in Mark is a reason to read this book. It is a very quick read, but a good one, for boys or girls.
Highly recommended.
(*)>
Anna begins this story as a way to pass time while the kids are waiting for the bus. Heidi is Hitler's un-acknowledged daughter. She's imperfect - not blonde and beautiful - so she's not a candidate for the arian race. But she loves her daddy, and he loves her in his way.
Mark listens to this story and as he does, a change occurs in him. He starts to consider Point Of View. The questions come - what if My Dad were evil? Would I see that? If I did, would I challenge him?
Beyond the captivating story that Anna tells, the transformation in Mark is a reason to read this book. It is a very quick read, but a good one, for boys or girls.
Highly recommended.
(*)>
I was very impressed
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-11
Review Date: 2007-10-11
My daughter, age 10, enjoys historical fiction, and when she brings a new book home I snag it. To me a good story is one that is engaging and hard to put down, and makes me think in new ways. This was one of the best. I totally disagree with the first editorial review that said the characters weren't developed well and the storylines chopped off. Little Tracy and Ben were developed just enough to move the story along, and the tranformation of Mark was fascinating. The storyline was very satisfying, and the point anyway was Mark's intriguing questions about who we are and how we make the choices we do and who we are separate from our parents. Especially for the target age, middle-school, I thought it was an excellent opening to discussion about going along with the crowd and standing up for what is right.
With that said, I wonder if middle schoolers aren't quite ready for the concepts. The many kid reviews missed the point (Can you see the teacher getting on Amazon to grade the assignment?) and when I asked my daughter how she liked it, she said, "Eh - I've read better." I can't wait to talk to her when she's done, but she's not as into as as other historical fiction books she's read.
With that said, I wonder if middle schoolers aren't quite ready for the concepts. The many kid reviews missed the point (Can you see the teacher getting on Amazon to grade the assignment?) and when I asked my daughter how she liked it, she said, "Eh - I've read better." I can't wait to talk to her when she's done, but she's not as into as as other historical fiction books she's read.
Hitler's Daughter
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-05
Review Date: 2006-10-05
I like this book because it is interesting and it talks about Hitler. He killed about 11 millions of people. I like this book because it have fact about a story about hitler and his daughter, and it talks about a family that were going to bus and Anna the big sister told storys about hitler's daughter.
Hitles Daughter
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-09
Review Date: 2006-09-09
This book is Awsome!!!!!!!!!! we read it in English. it always leaves a gap in the storyline for you to solve and put the pieces of the puzzle together which is what i like in a book. the end is mysterious yet interesting leaving you with the question "is it just a story, or is it real?"
I highly reccomend you read this book!!
Lauren
Markham
age 12
year 7
I highly reccomend you read this book!!
Lauren
Markham
age 12
year 7

Island of the Lost: Shipwrecked at the Edge of the World
Published in Hardcover by Algonquin Books (2007-05-17)
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Lost Again
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-31
Review Date: 2008-05-31
Kept my attention. Enough facts to make it believable, but almost too many to believe all that happened. I'm always divided when I read a novel like story based on "events". Author spent most of the book on the first shipwreck and didn't draw too many similarities for the two accounts. This type story would certainly make a good screenplay. Had the same feeling for me as when I read "The Perfect StorM".
The Great Survival Experiment
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-07
Review Date: 2008-04-07
In January of 1864, the Australian schooner, Grafton, wrecked on Auckland Island, an inhospitable and inclement land mass in the South Pacific, with a five-man crew. Half of this book is their story of survival. Under the leadership of captain Thomas Musgrave and the well-rounded ingenuity of the French prospector Francois Raynal, the crew used everything at their disposal. They built an impressive shelter, made clothes, shoes, tools for hunting seals, and even a working forge so they could create nails to build a small boat.
By unimaginable coincidence, five months after the Grafton wrecked, the freighter Invercauld, on its way from Melbourne to Callao, also crashed off the coast of Auckland Island with its 25-man crew. Nineteen survivors swam ashore on the northern coast of the island. There, they hunkered down in a state of panic. Their captain, George Delgarno, showed exceptionally inept leadership. Instead of encouraging teamwork among his men, he insisted on the same strict ranked hierarchy as was followed on the ship. Soon there was infighting. Men broke off from the group. In strict contrast to the Grafton situation, there was very little in the way of an organized effort for survival. The situation quickly deteriorated, with men dying of illness and starvation. The situation grew so dire, and so ill-equiped were the survivors, that some resorted to cannibalization of their dead comrades.
Because a mountainous region separated the two groups, neither group knew, at any time, of the other's existence. In that way, the simultaneous shipwrecks set up a fascinating social experiment. While the castaways from Grafton were fortunate in that their location was slightly more hospitable, with more edible vegetation and seals nearby, they also showed heroic resolve and resourcefulness. Their story alone would have been an amazing survival story, culminating in a desperate, five-day suicide mission in a boat of their own construction--an undersized and ill-equipped vessel that they optimistically dubbed Rescue--from Auckland Island to Stewart Island in New Zealand. In the end, all five crewmen survived the ordeal, which lasted nearly two years.
The other side of the tale is much more grim. Of the Invercauld crew, only three survived--the captain, first mate, and crewman Robert Holding--and then only thanks to Holding's resourcefulness and good luck in the form of a ship passing the island.
This is a fascinating book. Druett's extensive research and analysis are paid off in a story that is both enthralling and full of lessons about teamwork, leadership, and what it takes to survive in one of the more inhospitable corners of the sea.
By unimaginable coincidence, five months after the Grafton wrecked, the freighter Invercauld, on its way from Melbourne to Callao, also crashed off the coast of Auckland Island with its 25-man crew. Nineteen survivors swam ashore on the northern coast of the island. There, they hunkered down in a state of panic. Their captain, George Delgarno, showed exceptionally inept leadership. Instead of encouraging teamwork among his men, he insisted on the same strict ranked hierarchy as was followed on the ship. Soon there was infighting. Men broke off from the group. In strict contrast to the Grafton situation, there was very little in the way of an organized effort for survival. The situation quickly deteriorated, with men dying of illness and starvation. The situation grew so dire, and so ill-equiped were the survivors, that some resorted to cannibalization of their dead comrades.
Because a mountainous region separated the two groups, neither group knew, at any time, of the other's existence. In that way, the simultaneous shipwrecks set up a fascinating social experiment. While the castaways from Grafton were fortunate in that their location was slightly more hospitable, with more edible vegetation and seals nearby, they also showed heroic resolve and resourcefulness. Their story alone would have been an amazing survival story, culminating in a desperate, five-day suicide mission in a boat of their own construction--an undersized and ill-equipped vessel that they optimistically dubbed Rescue--from Auckland Island to Stewart Island in New Zealand. In the end, all five crewmen survived the ordeal, which lasted nearly two years.
The other side of the tale is much more grim. Of the Invercauld crew, only three survived--the captain, first mate, and crewman Robert Holding--and then only thanks to Holding's resourcefulness and good luck in the form of a ship passing the island.
This is a fascinating book. Druett's extensive research and analysis are paid off in a story that is both enthralling and full of lessons about teamwork, leadership, and what it takes to survive in one of the more inhospitable corners of the sea.
Lost and Found
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-15
Review Date: 2008-02-15
Engaging on many levels, Druett's telling story brings to life the way one crew got themselves out of a mighty mess.... and how the other collapsed through simple selfishness. Just wonderful.
Gripping historical tale of endurance and survival against all odds
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-06
Review Date: 2008-03-06
There are not enough stars to show how much I enjoyed this enthralling story of survival in an extremely hostile environment. Historian Joan Druett, drawing from journals kept by the shipwrecked crew throughout their ordeal and later accounts of the survivors, describes the conditions and their, at times fruitless, struggle for survival. The vivid picture she paints captured my imagination so fully I could visualise the wild, frigid island, the accommodations they built and their trips hunting and foraging for food. I was repeatedly astonished by the staggering ingenuity of the castaways. If this book had been a work of fiction the tales of skill and craftsmanship of the survivors would have been too far fetched and completely unbelievable which only served to make this factual story so much more enjoyable.
The inspiring leadership of the Captain of the Grafton who ensured the survival of his entire crew through the hardships of the months spent on the Auckland Islands and the adaptability of the men he led reminded me very much of Ernest Shackelton and his crew Endurance: Shackleton's Incredible Voyage
I could not put it down until I had finished it and, as a result of reading this book, my first of Joan Druett's, I have become a firm fan of her writing, determined to read all of her books. So far I have been just as delighted with her other works as I was with this one.
The inspiring leadership of the Captain of the Grafton who ensured the survival of his entire crew through the hardships of the months spent on the Auckland Islands and the adaptability of the men he led reminded me very much of Ernest Shackelton and his crew Endurance: Shackleton's Incredible Voyage
I could not put it down until I had finished it and, as a result of reading this book, my first of Joan Druett's, I have become a firm fan of her writing, determined to read all of her books. So far I have been just as delighted with her other works as I was with this one.
A Tale of Death and Survival on Auckland Island
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-19
Review Date: 2008-02-19
On January 3, 1864, the schooner Grafton wrecked on the southern end of Auckland Island, 285 miles south of New Zealand. On May 10 of the same year, the square-rigger Invercauld wrecked on the northwestern promontory of the same island. The five survivors of the Grafton and the 19 survivors of the Invercauld co-habited the same island for an entire year without either group ever once being aware that the other group was there, the reason being the twenty miles of "impassable cliffs and chasms" between the north and south ends of the islands. In Island of the Lost: Shipwrecked at the Edge of the World, maritime historian Joan Druett tells the vastly different stories of the two groups of survivors.
From journals, letters, published books and other research documents, Druett has interwoven the stories of the two groups and shown how through cooperation, discipline, hard work, routine, ingenuity, and respect the survivors of the Grafton had a far different experience and outcome from the group of Invercauld survivors, whose leadership failed them, who splintered into groups, and who gave themselves over to the despair of their situation.
We come to know each of the men from the Grafton as they hunt for food, build shelter, make clothing and tools, and wait to be rescued for almost two years before deciding to try to build a boat and escape. We watch the men from the Invercauld succumb to apathy and lethargy, or else to cannibalism. Only one resourceful seaman had the ability to cope with their circumstances and helped keep the final few survivors alive.
Druett has very skillfully penned a fascinating tale of human nature, death, and survival in a hostile environment. It is a book that is hard to put down, with a story that is unbelievable - except that it is true. Amazingly, the few Invercauld survivors are rescued, and the Grafton castaways make an heroic journey back to safety. More than just history, this is an amazing book about survival against all odds and how that survival depends at least in part on attitude. It is a good lesson for us all.
From journals, letters, published books and other research documents, Druett has interwoven the stories of the two groups and shown how through cooperation, discipline, hard work, routine, ingenuity, and respect the survivors of the Grafton had a far different experience and outcome from the group of Invercauld survivors, whose leadership failed them, who splintered into groups, and who gave themselves over to the despair of their situation.
We come to know each of the men from the Grafton as they hunt for food, build shelter, make clothing and tools, and wait to be rescued for almost two years before deciding to try to build a boat and escape. We watch the men from the Invercauld succumb to apathy and lethargy, or else to cannibalism. Only one resourceful seaman had the ability to cope with their circumstances and helped keep the final few survivors alive.
Druett has very skillfully penned a fascinating tale of human nature, death, and survival in a hostile environment. It is a book that is hard to put down, with a story that is unbelievable - except that it is true. Amazingly, the few Invercauld survivors are rescued, and the Grafton castaways make an heroic journey back to safety. More than just history, this is an amazing book about survival against all odds and how that survival depends at least in part on attitude. It is a good lesson for us all.

Eyewitness Travel Guide to New Zealand
Published in Paperback by DK Travel (2001-05-28)
List price: $25.00
New price: $15.51
Used price: $3.58
Used price: $3.58
Average review score: 

These books can't be beat and are top choices for destination-oriented travelers
Helpful Votes: 14 out of 23 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-15
Review Date: 2006-10-15
NEW ZEALAND achieves the same for that country, packing all into a pocket-sized tote which is just easy enough to take along, yet compromises nothing in the amount of detail offered. From driving and walking tours to cultural insights, these books can't be beat and are top choices for destination-oriented travelers wanting visual excitement paired with practical facts.
Diane C. Donovan
California Bookwatch
Diane C. Donovan
California Bookwatch
Use this DK travel guide like a shopping catalogue
Helpful Votes: 23 out of 24 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-10
Review Date: 2007-08-10
This DK travel guide to New Zealand is quite good at describing that island nation in a general sense, and offering lots of beautiful color illustrations and photographs of neat places to go. But it's not so great as an actual travel guide. First of all, it's a bit heavy to carry around. Second, it is broad, rather than jam-packed with helpful details. Third, it offers up mostly white-bread, been-there-done-that activities and sites.
I suggest that you consult this DK guide **before** you head to New Zealand, in order to get familiar with the country and to pick the mainstream places and monuments you want to see. Then leave it at home, and bring a more dense, helpful guide along with you (such as "The Rough Guide to New Zealand").
The DK guide to New Zealand will make a handsome souvenir reference once you return home.
I suggest that you consult this DK guide **before** you head to New Zealand, in order to get familiar with the country and to pick the mainstream places and monuments you want to see. Then leave it at home, and bring a more dense, helpful guide along with you (such as "The Rough Guide to New Zealand").
The DK guide to New Zealand will make a handsome souvenir reference once you return home.
Good single-book companion
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-03
Review Date: 2006-11-03
On an August trip to see family in NZ's Northland, I brought this along and was glad I did. The trouble with visiting Kiwi relatives (and with the Kiwi husband) is that they don't always think of the "attraction" things that are between two points, and this helped break up some of the driving with good side trips and information.
Light enough to carry along, detailed enough, good pictures and format. I liked it a lot and will take it down on the next trip!
Light enough to carry along, detailed enough, good pictures and format. I liked it a lot and will take it down on the next trip!
Useful, but needs a supplement
Helpful Votes: 52 out of 52 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-03
Review Date: 2007-01-03
I love the Eyewitness Travel Guide series but they generally suffer from certain limitations and the New Zealand guide is no exception. It starts off with the standard historical chapter before getting to an area-by-area description and summary of both islands that form the country. This is where the book shines because it offers color photos on every page that are invaluable in helping you decide which sights are must-see and which ones you can skip if you are short on time. As you would expect, every region is covered, from Auckland in the north down to Stewart Island in the far south. All of the major attractions are covered although perhaps not as comprehensively as you might like.
Next, come the sections on hotels, shopping, restaurants, and other practical needs. These sections are not as comprehensive as you'll see in some other guides such as Frommer's New Zealand (Frommer's Complete). And this really is what it comes down to. The Eyewitness guides are not as detailed as most of the other guide books. They are, however, the only series to offer hundreds of color photos to help you visualise your trip and this is an invaluable planning tool. I highly recommend that you buy this guide as well as one of the more detailed books and use them both to plan your trip. That's the only way to get everything you need to plan a great vacation.
Next, come the sections on hotels, shopping, restaurants, and other practical needs. These sections are not as comprehensive as you'll see in some other guides such as Frommer's New Zealand (Frommer's Complete). And this really is what it comes down to. The Eyewitness guides are not as detailed as most of the other guide books. They are, however, the only series to offer hundreds of color photos to help you visualise your trip and this is an invaluable planning tool. I highly recommend that you buy this guide as well as one of the more detailed books and use them both to plan your trip. That's the only way to get everything you need to plan a great vacation.
New Zealand Eyewithess Travel Guide is great for planning
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-30
Review Date: 2007-09-30
Eyewithess Travel Guides give the best overall overview of any travel book or other travel product - good organization; great pictures, maps and other graphics; interesting & concise text and descriptions about history, national foods and beverages, etc.; good suggestions for lodging and eating. They are excellet resource and reference books, but they are concise enough to give a relatively complete overview but short enough to quickly convey information, especially if you do not have a lot of free time.
I believe that carefully reading about a desination is important for planning any trip. The Eyewithess Travel Guides are the best way to obtain that overview and prioritize where you want to go. The New Zealand guide is enormous help to us with our planning.
I believe that carefully reading about a desination is important for planning any trip. The Eyewithess Travel Guides are the best way to obtain that overview and prioritize where you want to go. The New Zealand guide is enormous help to us with our planning.

Does My Head Look Big In This?
Published in Hardcover by Orchard Books (2007-05-01)
List price: $16.99
New price: $6.79
Used price: $6.50
Used price: $6.50
Average review score: 

Outstanding!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-22
Review Date: 2008-04-22
This book is excellent!! The author does a wonderful job of giving western readers the opportunity to learn and become more familiar with the Islamic women culture. In this book the author links humanity together by inspiring courage in us to deal with social pressures and taking a stand for our beliefs. The fact that this book is set in a adolescent envoirnment revitilzes teenage values. Many people can benefit from the principals Amal beleives in, she is a rock that keeps her friends afloat. The different characters in the book are the sprinkles on the cake, they are key additions in which we turn the page and read on.
Interesting and Relevant View of a Muslim Teen's Life
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-15
Review Date: 2008-07-15
This book offers a timely look at the life of a Muslim teen struggling to live her life according to her religion while she is surrounded by prejudice and ignorance. Luckily, the author peppers the book with humor, so it never gets too depressing or heavy-handed.
While I thought this book was cute and a very good effort by a first-time novelist, there were a couple issues. The dialogue wasn't always as realistic as it could have been, and some characters seemed created solely to give the author an opportunity to present the reader with another issue facing Muslims. While the latter could occassionally cause the book to come across as a tad preachy, overall, this was an enjoyable read that I would recommend to anyone interested in a different perspective on current affairs. I think this author's future novels will be even better, and I look forward to seeing more from her.
While I thought this book was cute and a very good effort by a first-time novelist, there were a couple issues. The dialogue wasn't always as realistic as it could have been, and some characters seemed created solely to give the author an opportunity to present the reader with another issue facing Muslims. While the latter could occassionally cause the book to come across as a tad preachy, overall, this was an enjoyable read that I would recommend to anyone interested in a different perspective on current affairs. I think this author's future novels will be even better, and I look forward to seeing more from her.
Delightful read!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-14
Review Date: 2008-07-14
Randa Abdel-Fattah has written a breezy, light-hearted, entertaining book on first glance - excellent! But on deeper reading - her deft touch on serious issues of teen acceptance, peer pressure, first cruch, culture vs. religion underscore the value of this book for young adults, both Muslims & non-Muslims alike.
Her clever ability to weave interesting lessons about Islam (& Catholicism & Judaism too) was mesmerizing. The characters were well-developed - as the story progresses, you find yourself involved in their lives & actually rooting for their success. This book is the perfect gift for that teen or teenager at heart!
As the co-author of The American Muslim Teenager's Handbook- I know firsthand the challenges of writing for the Young Adult audience, whether they are Muslim or just curious about Islam, it's wonderful to see more books on this timely subject - thank you!
Her clever ability to weave interesting lessons about Islam (& Catholicism & Judaism too) was mesmerizing. The characters were well-developed - as the story progresses, you find yourself involved in their lives & actually rooting for their success. This book is the perfect gift for that teen or teenager at heart!
As the co-author of The American Muslim Teenager's Handbook- I know firsthand the challenges of writing for the Young Adult audience, whether they are Muslim or just curious about Islam, it's wonderful to see more books on this timely subject - thank you!
great
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-05
Review Date: 2008-05-05
I thought this was a great book! I know there was a review above that stated that the author was just trying to prove that the hijab is just a piece of material and compared it to saying the cross is just like two sticks. I disagree. I believe that the author was only trying to say that Amal shouldn't be judged negatively because of a piece of material but she wasn't minimizing the importance of the hijab and the deep connection and faithfulness Amal felt with wearing it. I believe Amal is changed by wearing the hijab. She not only makes the strong decision to become a "full timer" and changes her outward appearance but I also saw an inward change as well. She realizes her strong relationship with God and strengthens her spirituality. Amal prays five times a day during school, stays strong during the tough Ramadan, endures much criticism due to the hijab, and stays true to her principles throughout the novel, especially not giving in to her crush on Adam. I also appreciated the relatable characters in the story. Her friends all had their own story and problems which made it relatable to many readers. I loved Amal's mothers constant kindness despite the cruelty of Mrs. Vaselli. I was touched by the profound impact Amal ended up having on Mrs. Vaselli's life. Amal really began to understand all the pain behind the woman's mean nature and helped her to overcome her struggles and ultimately, find some happiness again. We learned in my Arab Women's Literature class that Amal means hope and I truly believe that hope is what she gave to this old, stubborn, Christian woman. I also enjoyed the comedy in the book immensely. I believe that the author utilized a comedic nature throughout the novel to keep our interest. Amal was funny yet she kept a serious purpose. She was relatable and respectable. As a non-muslim young woman, I feel I learned a lot about her culture and religion. You could see throughout the story the difference between the true religion and a misinterpreted culture as well. Leila's mother was from an old village in Egypt and was stuck in what she believed were the traditional ways. Amal clearly states that Leila's mother could not even read the Qu'ran for herself. Similarly, Amal shows great disgust for the terrorists who are referred to as Muslims when they apparently do not demonstrate any of the teachings of her religion. Overall, I think it's clear that I thoroughly enjoyed this novel and the many insights it had to offer. I would recommend it to many. :-)
Does My Head Look Big in This? = A+
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-01
Review Date: 2008-04-01
Does My Head Look Big in This? is one of the best books I have ever read in my entire life. The author does a wonderful job of making one young woman's voice loud, clear, and interesting. Throughout the entire novel, Amal is certain of who she is and what she believes in; she does not let anyone persuade her to change her mind about wearing the hijab. There is no indication that the hijab is simply a piece of material. Rather, the hijab allows Amal to grow so much as a person and deepen her faith. Although this novel is about a Muslim girl, anyone can relate to it. The other characters in the novel, from all walks of life, are very much the same as Amal and all deal with difficult situations.
I feel that I have learned more about the culture and religion, and the distinctions between the two. It is very evident that Leila's mother goes by what was done in her village and not textbook Islam. Likewise, Mrs. Vaselli takes what she has learned from her little town in Greece and does not behave in a manner that true Christians do.
There are people like Tia, Claire, and Rita in almost every high school. It is very unfortunate, but it is true. Therefore, I think that many girls can relate to how it feels to have people make fun of you and say mean comments about you to your face and behind your back.
Comedy is a great method to use when dealing with those in marginalized groups. I do not feel as if the author made this book into a joke at all; however, she did allow readers to become interested and engaged in it because of the comedy used. Whenever a person can smile or laugh, tension is reduced. Above all, this novel is inspiring, encouraging, and interesting. If you are a boy, girl, teenager, man, woman, Muslim, Christian, Jehovah Witness, American, Austrailian, or Arab, you will truly enjoy this book. In other words, all people will enjoy Does My Head Look Big in This? because the author is very skillful and presents a powerful and moving argument in the form of a story.
I feel that I have learned more about the culture and religion, and the distinctions between the two. It is very evident that Leila's mother goes by what was done in her village and not textbook Islam. Likewise, Mrs. Vaselli takes what she has learned from her little town in Greece and does not behave in a manner that true Christians do.
There are people like Tia, Claire, and Rita in almost every high school. It is very unfortunate, but it is true. Therefore, I think that many girls can relate to how it feels to have people make fun of you and say mean comments about you to your face and behind your back.
Comedy is a great method to use when dealing with those in marginalized groups. I do not feel as if the author made this book into a joke at all; however, she did allow readers to become interested and engaged in it because of the comedy used. Whenever a person can smile or laugh, tension is reduced. Above all, this novel is inspiring, encouraging, and interesting. If you are a boy, girl, teenager, man, woman, Muslim, Christian, Jehovah Witness, American, Austrailian, or Arab, you will truly enjoy this book. In other words, all people will enjoy Does My Head Look Big in This? because the author is very skillful and presents a powerful and moving argument in the form of a story.

Schlepping Through the Alps: My Search for Austria's Jewish Past with Its Last Wandering Shepherd
Published in Hardcover by Ballantine Books (2005-03-29)
List price: $23.95
New price: $9.97
Used price: $3.88
Collectible price: $23.95
Used price: $3.88
Collectible price: $23.95
Average review score: 

A Chochem in Sheeps' Clothing
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-12
Review Date: 2008-06-12
A chochem is, in Yiddish, a wise person. Sam Apple, the writer, is a lot wiser than Sam Apple, the character he creates, a woody allen-ish hypochondriac awkwardly trying to write a book about a wandering Jewish Austrian shepherd. Apple also scores a literary triumph in his portrait of the one-of-a-kind Hans Breuer, the shepherd.
Post-modern in its best sense, the book makes wonderful and surprising connections between the search for justice and reconciliation in post-war Austria, the history of domesticated animals, Yiddish song, sexuality and the fine points of herding 675 sheep through mountains, forests and small towns.
I sat down to read for a few minutes and stayed in the chair for most of the day, following the hapless Sam as he tries to live the life of an alpine shepherd with Hans, Hans' estranged wife and devoted girlfriend, his sons and various eccentric friends like Austria's giant champion scythe-wielding grass-cutter. More is revealed when Sam spends time in Vienna meeting politicians, survivors of the Shoah and anti-racist activists, including the beguiling Irene, a welcome romantic interest whose fling with Sam forms a revealing counterpoint to Hans' tangled love life.
Through these varied landscapes, Apple's voice is funny, knowing and refreshingly humble. He gracefully mixes and blends the
Jewish, picaresque, storytelling tradition of Sholem Aleichem and S.Y. Agnon with the irreverence of Phillip Roth and the eye for quirky detail of Bruce Chatwin He's a young writer whose first book jump starts what I imagine will be a surprising and exciting career.
Post-modern in its best sense, the book makes wonderful and surprising connections between the search for justice and reconciliation in post-war Austria, the history of domesticated animals, Yiddish song, sexuality and the fine points of herding 675 sheep through mountains, forests and small towns.
I sat down to read for a few minutes and stayed in the chair for most of the day, following the hapless Sam as he tries to live the life of an alpine shepherd with Hans, Hans' estranged wife and devoted girlfriend, his sons and various eccentric friends like Austria's giant champion scythe-wielding grass-cutter. More is revealed when Sam spends time in Vienna meeting politicians, survivors of the Shoah and anti-racist activists, including the beguiling Irene, a welcome romantic interest whose fling with Sam forms a revealing counterpoint to Hans' tangled love life.
Through these varied landscapes, Apple's voice is funny, knowing and refreshingly humble. He gracefully mixes and blends the
Jewish, picaresque, storytelling tradition of Sholem Aleichem and S.Y. Agnon with the irreverence of Phillip Roth and the eye for quirky detail of Bruce Chatwin He's a young writer whose first book jump starts what I imagine will be a surprising and exciting career.
FUNNY BOOK - BIG SCREEN
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-27
Review Date: 2008-03-27
I read this enchanting book when it first came out and could not put it down. Reading it for the second time, I can't help but wonder, "why isn't this a movie?" This rare, heartwarming story told with such humor and wit could easily translate into another media form. It's definitely time to replace "The Sound of Music" with a new travel guide through the Alps. After all, a shepherd, a nice Jewish boy, and a beautiful girl could make the hills come alive again. Hollywood, where are you?
Not For Jews Only
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-23
Review Date: 2007-09-23
To paraphrase comic Jeff Foxworthy, if you find this engaging travelogue entirely humorless... you might be an Anti-Semite. (Reading it might be a good self-test.) Although Jewishness and Anti-Jewishness are portrayed throughout, Mr. Apple's writing is so genuine and fluid that anyone with an appreciation for English will enjoy its exceptional quality. While comparisons have been made to Woody Allen, author Sam Apple might better be described as the Hunter S. Thompson of Generation X. Perhaps "Rolling Stone" would do well to engage him to cover the upcoming Presidential election--and those uncomfortable with Jewishness (Jews and non-Jews alike)--would find it less frightening to enjoy a bright new literary light. Meanwhile, try this one: reading through it is no schlep.
A Tale spiced up with enough lively and sometimes humorous commentary that will unquestionably keep readers turning the pages.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-01
Review Date: 2006-10-01
Sam Apple, author of Schlepping Through The Alps: My Search For Austria's Jewish Past With Its Last Wandering Shepherd, first encounters Yiddish folk-singer Hans Breuer at a concert and slide show in New York. Breuer, as Apple points out, is not just your ordinary run-of-the mill Yiddish folk-singer, rather he is truly a wandering Jew and as he reveals in his book, "If you ever happen to be hiking the Alps and you see a man singing Yiddish songs as he watches a dog chasing a sheep in a raincoat, no need for concern."
Apple, who grew up in Houston and now makes his home in Brooklyn, was quite intrigued by this forty-five year old Austrian shepherd. The result was a one thousand word article that eventually has being turned into a witty yet insightful book, wherein much of Apple's research was accumulated while traveling in Austria as an apprentice to Breuer.
During their first encounter in New York, Breuer mentioned to Apple that he wanted to bring Yiddish to the uninitiated in the Austrian Alps. When asked if he wanted these individuals to remember their Yiddish neighbors, his reply was: "I want to make them confront for the first time in their lives this culture that their uncles and fathers destroyed." With this in mind Apple decided to voyage to Austria and find out for himself what it was like to be a shepherd in the twenty-first century and to make sense of Han's Jewish identity or as he states, what it really meant for him to sing in Yiddish. He also wanted to learn about sheep, Yiddish music and anti-Semitism.
Apple's engaging narrative is what Yiddish speaking readers would probably classify as a good "meinsa," something akin to an old wife's tale only this story is actually true. Apple beckons us to follow his meandering through the Alps following a herd of sheep, a shepherd, his mistress and young lamb herders, while picking up along the way various shepherding tips from his mentor and learning about Austria's past and present political landscape.
During the course of his apprentice with Breuer, Apple learns about Austria's post-war anti-Nazi legislation that led to the sentencing to death of several Nazis and the conviction and incarceration of thousands of low-ranking Nazis. However, a few years after the enactment of this legislation, a general amnesty came into effect and all but a handful of the worst offenders were free to live happily every after. In fact, the government's constant line about complaints about Austria's behavior during the Holocaust was that if you have one take it to Germany.
Quite telling of Breuer's psyche is that he associates the Austrian countryside with fascism and anti-Semitism. When he encounters people along his shepherding path, he believes that they are all staring at him with cold eyes, aware that he is not one of them. Apple notes that Breuer enjoys being a living part of a dying tradition, where Yiddish and shepherding are relics of another time- nonetheless he takes great pride in both. Moreover, he is not quite sure how much of his own romanticizing of wandering and Jewishness has drawn him to Breuer. However, what he observes about Breuer's shepherding is "the rejection of modern society in the aftermath of the Holocaust. In his Yiddish songs I inevitably listened for the millions of missing Yiddish voices that should have been singing along."
Apple does an excellent job of capturing the flavor of the Austrian Alps with its little villages and inhabitants who seem to either have collective amnesia pertaining to their past or consider themselves blameless. Although he never does find as many anti-Semites as he originally feared, Apple does provide his readers with some serious insights, spiced up with enough lively and sometimes humorous commentary that will unquestionably keep readers turning the pages all the way to the end.
Norm Goldman, Editor Bookpleasures
Apple, who grew up in Houston and now makes his home in Brooklyn, was quite intrigued by this forty-five year old Austrian shepherd. The result was a one thousand word article that eventually has being turned into a witty yet insightful book, wherein much of Apple's research was accumulated while traveling in Austria as an apprentice to Breuer.
During their first encounter in New York, Breuer mentioned to Apple that he wanted to bring Yiddish to the uninitiated in the Austrian Alps. When asked if he wanted these individuals to remember their Yiddish neighbors, his reply was: "I want to make them confront for the first time in their lives this culture that their uncles and fathers destroyed." With this in mind Apple decided to voyage to Austria and find out for himself what it was like to be a shepherd in the twenty-first century and to make sense of Han's Jewish identity or as he states, what it really meant for him to sing in Yiddish. He also wanted to learn about sheep, Yiddish music and anti-Semitism.
Apple's engaging narrative is what Yiddish speaking readers would probably classify as a good "meinsa," something akin to an old wife's tale only this story is actually true. Apple beckons us to follow his meandering through the Alps following a herd of sheep, a shepherd, his mistress and young lamb herders, while picking up along the way various shepherding tips from his mentor and learning about Austria's past and present political landscape.
During the course of his apprentice with Breuer, Apple learns about Austria's post-war anti-Nazi legislation that led to the sentencing to death of several Nazis and the conviction and incarceration of thousands of low-ranking Nazis. However, a few years after the enactment of this legislation, a general amnesty came into effect and all but a handful of the worst offenders were free to live happily every after. In fact, the government's constant line about complaints about Austria's behavior during the Holocaust was that if you have one take it to Germany.
Quite telling of Breuer's psyche is that he associates the Austrian countryside with fascism and anti-Semitism. When he encounters people along his shepherding path, he believes that they are all staring at him with cold eyes, aware that he is not one of them. Apple notes that Breuer enjoys being a living part of a dying tradition, where Yiddish and shepherding are relics of another time- nonetheless he takes great pride in both. Moreover, he is not quite sure how much of his own romanticizing of wandering and Jewishness has drawn him to Breuer. However, what he observes about Breuer's shepherding is "the rejection of modern society in the aftermath of the Holocaust. In his Yiddish songs I inevitably listened for the millions of missing Yiddish voices that should have been singing along."
Apple does an excellent job of capturing the flavor of the Austrian Alps with its little villages and inhabitants who seem to either have collective amnesia pertaining to their past or consider themselves blameless. Although he never does find as many anti-Semites as he originally feared, Apple does provide his readers with some serious insights, spiced up with enough lively and sometimes humorous commentary that will unquestionably keep readers turning the pages all the way to the end.
Norm Goldman, Editor Bookpleasures
The Masks of Comedy and Tragedy Hang Together
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-28
Review Date: 2008-04-28
There are two stories here. Which one dominates your reading will depend in part on your tendency to optimism or pessimism at the moment that you read. The grim story that hangs over everything is the fate of the Jews in Austria. There were a quarter million Jews and people of Jewish parentage in Austria in the 1930's. After the Austrians decided to kill or expel their Jewish neighbors, there were almost none. Today, the Jews of Austria number about 10,000-most of them in Vienna.
The comedy is the story of Hans Breuer, a folk-singing grand-child of the radical sixties. In the middle of the world's most developed economy, he makes a living as a shepherd: a Jewish shepherd.Sam Apple, the author of this book, plays with the nature of the shepherd's life, the mercurial personality of Hans Breuer and the odd business of being Jewish in a country where killing Jews was a bit of a national sport.
Having spent a great deal of time in Vienna, I can tell you that Apple gets a great deal of this right. He certainly gets all of it funny, or at least wry. He concentrates on lingering old-fashioned anti-semetism and ignores both the small philo-semetic counter-trend and the more genteel neo-jew-hating of the left.
Apple spends a great deal of his time talking about himself and so the book is also partly a memoir. The self that he reveals is game for the adventure of being a shepard for a while, but also comically neurotic and thereby a bit unattractive.
On one of my last trips to Austria, I went to a Hans Breuer recital. It was at a bar in the countryside. Half the audience was out from Vienna, the other half local people having dinner. Breuer seemed to think he was in a concert hall and between songs went back in the kitchen to silence the cooks. It was an awkward moment, but one that seemed to fit.
Lynn Hoffman, Author of The New Short Course in Wine
The comedy is the story of Hans Breuer, a folk-singing grand-child of the radical sixties. In the middle of the world's most developed economy, he makes a living as a shepherd: a Jewish shepherd.Sam Apple, the author of this book, plays with the nature of the shepherd's life, the mercurial personality of Hans Breuer and the odd business of being Jewish in a country where killing Jews was a bit of a national sport.
Having spent a great deal of time in Vienna, I can tell you that Apple gets a great deal of this right. He certainly gets all of it funny, or at least wry. He concentrates on lingering old-fashioned anti-semetism and ignores both the small philo-semetic counter-trend and the more genteel neo-jew-hating of the left.
Apple spends a great deal of his time talking about himself and so the book is also partly a memoir. The self that he reveals is game for the adventure of being a shepard for a while, but also comically neurotic and thereby a bit unattractive.
On one of my last trips to Austria, I went to a Hans Breuer recital. It was at a bar in the countryside. Half the audience was out from Vienna, the other half local people having dinner. Breuer seemed to think he was in a concert hall and between songs went back in the kitchen to silence the cooks. It was an awkward moment, but one that seemed to fit.
Lynn Hoffman, Author of The New Short Course in Wine

Strategic Management in the Asia Pacific: Harnessing Regional and Organizational Change for Competitive Advantage
Published in Paperback by Butterworth-Heinemann (2000-01)
List price: $57.95
Used price: $18.45
Average review score: 

Excellent coverage of business-government relations
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-10
Review Date: 2002-10-10
The chapters on business-government relations provide some real insights. The book is more "academic" in character, and not really recommended for those who have no knowledge of Asian business. But with a little knowledge, one can draw on and use a wealth of information, especially as regards relations with various business stakeholders.
Interesting takes on business-government relations
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2001-04-05
Review Date: 2001-04-05
Really enjoyed the discussions on Singapore, Vietnam and Australia -- a complex and cutting-edge view of business-government relations.
good stuff
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2001-11-14
Review Date: 2001-11-14
Hi,,,
I am from Indonesia and working in one of the government company...After I read this book from web site...I feel that this book has a lot of information to suppot all of the asian development country (like Indonesia) to make a change their organization structure...
But as you know....Its price was too high...especially for me...
May I get this book with a lower price....or may I copied this....Thank you..
I am from Indonesia and working in one of the government company...After I read this book from web site...I feel that this book has a lot of information to suppot all of the asian development country (like Indonesia) to make a change their organization structure...
But as you know....Its price was too high...especially for me...
May I get this book with a lower price....or may I copied this....Thank you..
Good review of Asia-Pacific business
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2002-02-02
Review Date: 2002-02-02
Covers diverse viewpoints, stakeholders and approaches for a complex look at business environments in the Asia Pacific. Not easy reading but worth the effort.
Very comprehensive analysis of stakeholders
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2002-01-09
Review Date: 2002-01-09
This book's strength lies in its approaching Asian business and operating in Asia from various stakeholders' perspectives -- governments, local businessess, foreign multinational corporations, etc.. Excellent and systematic coverage of a complex topic!

A Commonwealth of Thieves: The Improbable Birth of Australia
Published in MP3 CD by Tantor Media (2006-11-01)
List price: $24.99
New price: $14.88
Used price: $16.96
Used price: $16.96
Average review score: 

Excellent introduction
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-03
Review Date: 2008-07-03
Keneally has produced a fascinating introduction to the foundation of Australia, a fantastic mix of the high politics and the fascinating lives of the first settlers and their complex relationship with the Aboriginal peoples.
A Not So Holy Beginning
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-26
Review Date: 2008-02-26
Robert Hughes,'Fatal Shore' redressed? Not quite. Hughes's well-honed invective sits uneasily besides Keneally's pragmatic prose. Keneally extolls the virtuous outcome of Australia's first governor, Arthur Phillip's benevolent authority, and his establishment, against all odds of Australia's criminal society. Whereas Hughes feels troubled by these origins, Keneally, the ongoing grief of the indigenous inhabitants apart, senses triumph. The writing does not wear its research excessively, and the setting of the settlers amidst an alien environment and culture is as balanced as any recent history I have encountered. We get thumbnail portraits of a large cast of people that bring the story closer to us and a graphic sense of the hardships endured, which few present day residents around the harbour city would easily imagine. Most of the bods on the book's positive side of the ledger have their names embedded in the city, a minor intetrest to local readers. And Glebe? the name of the vegetable patch attached to a church; never knew that either!
Most interesting "history lesson"
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-09
Review Date: 2008-01-09
The author of Schindler's List brings us his 37th book, a history of the four years during which white Australia was born. Thomas Keneally competes with Robert Hughes' epic history of Australia's origin that covers a span of 80 years, chronicling the white settlers as oppressive. But Keneally's fresh, novelistic history has found its own place in Australian historiography; it scrutinizes a short time period, providing a multifaceted and profound study of the historical characters that birthed Australia.
Midwife to this birth was Great Britain, who sent a captain of her royal navy, Arthur Phillip, to oversee as governor a penal-colony experiment with 759 thieves, prostitutes, and criminal children. The poorly planned experiment could have easily become a disaster, had Phillip not been both authoritative and compassionate. Ultimately, Keneally admits bewilderment as to the true nature of Phillip, the narrative's potential hero, given his "nature so complex and hidden behind official formality."
Keneally illuminates the white settlement against the backdrop of the then virtually unknown Aborigines, whose contact with the criminal settlers kept tension high. The useful historiographical theme of dichotomy between two cultures takes shape here, with Keneally's description of the Aboriginal worldview, and his admission of its impossible incongruence with the intent of the Empire to colonize and cultivate.
Keneally tactfully narrates the clashes between the two discordant populations without romanticizing either, portraying with equal emphasis the contrasting barbarity and decency both groups exhibited. For example, Phillip's would-be-hero counterpart, Woolaware Bennelong, captured as an Aboriginal translator, assisted the white settlers after his escape, to the point that he was finally disowned by his own people.
Keneally's tactful tone has its own purpose. Where Hughes' history did not hesitate to weigh in against the colonial invaders, Keneally sustains his narrative along the middle ground, allowing Australians to realize their heritage as less melodramatic, and oppressive.
With Phillip's return to England after his term, Australians were left without a founding father-figure. Keneally's history fills in that gap, with assurances from Keneally that he can make out a positive resemblance between the first governor's pragmatism and thoroughness, and that of the country today.
Armchair Interviews says: Very well-done history.
Midwife to this birth was Great Britain, who sent a captain of her royal navy, Arthur Phillip, to oversee as governor a penal-colony experiment with 759 thieves, prostitutes, and criminal children. The poorly planned experiment could have easily become a disaster, had Phillip not been both authoritative and compassionate. Ultimately, Keneally admits bewilderment as to the true nature of Phillip, the narrative's potential hero, given his "nature so complex and hidden behind official formality."
Keneally illuminates the white settlement against the backdrop of the then virtually unknown Aborigines, whose contact with the criminal settlers kept tension high. The useful historiographical theme of dichotomy between two cultures takes shape here, with Keneally's description of the Aboriginal worldview, and his admission of its impossible incongruence with the intent of the Empire to colonize and cultivate.
Keneally tactfully narrates the clashes between the two discordant populations without romanticizing either, portraying with equal emphasis the contrasting barbarity and decency both groups exhibited. For example, Phillip's would-be-hero counterpart, Woolaware Bennelong, captured as an Aboriginal translator, assisted the white settlers after his escape, to the point that he was finally disowned by his own people.
Keneally's tactful tone has its own purpose. Where Hughes' history did not hesitate to weigh in against the colonial invaders, Keneally sustains his narrative along the middle ground, allowing Australians to realize their heritage as less melodramatic, and oppressive.
With Phillip's return to England after his term, Australians were left without a founding father-figure. Keneally's history fills in that gap, with assurances from Keneally that he can make out a positive resemblance between the first governor's pragmatism and thoroughness, and that of the country today.
Armchair Interviews says: Very well-done history.
An Appealing Summary for Those Who Know Little About Australian History
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-30
Review Date: 2007-07-30
Like a lot of myths, the founding of Australia by 'convicts' is altogether a misleading statement. Though the majority of people in the "First Fleet" had been consigned to 'transportation', if we are to believe Keneally, they were more schemers and scammers than violent criminals. In addition there were a number of marines and government officials who would 'settle' down with convict-wives and start up some of Australia's most famous families.
Keneally only writes about the three "Fleets" that arrived in the first five years of immigration. He has done his research into how the colony was started and what failed and what worked. He has also taken the time to try to present the emotional effect on the original (The Eoras) society that existed at the time of Sydney's founding. Unlike most histories, Keneally doesn't present the land as having been 'vacant' and only marginally occupied by the native people. He tries to give a flavor as to how the Eoras viewed the Europeans who had settled in their midst.
My one negative comment about the book reflects a lack of historical back- ground on my part not Keneally. I would guess that he wrote this book for home (Australian) consumption and therefore assumes that certain informa- tion would be evident to most readers. Unfortunately, most Americans learn little or nothing about Australia and therefore it would have been nice if an appendix could have been added to clarify some situations that Keneally mentions that happened later, such as the Irish Rebellion of 1804 and the mutiny against Governor Bligh.
Keneally only writes about the three "Fleets" that arrived in the first five years of immigration. He has done his research into how the colony was started and what failed and what worked. He has also taken the time to try to present the emotional effect on the original (The Eoras) society that existed at the time of Sydney's founding. Unlike most histories, Keneally doesn't present the land as having been 'vacant' and only marginally occupied by the native people. He tries to give a flavor as to how the Eoras viewed the Europeans who had settled in their midst.
My one negative comment about the book reflects a lack of historical back- ground on my part not Keneally. I would guess that he wrote this book for home (Australian) consumption and therefore assumes that certain informa- tion would be evident to most readers. Unfortunately, most Americans learn little or nothing about Australia and therefore it would have been nice if an appendix could have been added to clarify some situations that Keneally mentions that happened later, such as the Irish Rebellion of 1804 and the mutiny against Governor Bligh.
An Amazing Adventure Story
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-10
Review Date: 2007-06-10
This account of the founding of the first English penal colony in Australia is also a view into other things, not least the state of English society in the late eighteenth century, one of the consequences of the Enclosure Act, and human triumph over fantastic adversity. It is very difficult for us to even imagine the hardships these people endured, from what seemed an arbitrary legal system, the overcrowded jails and prison hulks, the voyage to the end of the world, and finally survival in a very alien land. It must have been no less difficult for the Aborigines, but their story is only peripheral to the focus of the book. There is a very good follow-up on what became of some of the first arrivals, those who not only survived but also succeeded beyond whatever they could have dreamed of in the Mother Country, becoming in time and in spite of their origins the pioneers and founders of a modern, vibrant country.

The Rough Guide To New Zealand 4 (Rough Guide Travel Guides)
Published in Paperback by Rough Guides (2004-10-18)
List price: $24.99
New price: $9.25
Used price: $1.63
Used price: $1.63
Average review score: 

Love all the Rough Guides!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-28
Review Date: 2007-09-28
This is the first Rough Guide I ever used and it was so great, that I have bought one for each of the countries I visited. They might be large, but I only had to bring one book and it took care of all questions/confusion/curiousity/mysteries. It became our bible on our trip to New Zealand!
the best of the bunch
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-11
Review Date: 2007-08-11
I went with my beautiful brunette wife to New Zealand on our honeymoon, and "The Rough Guide to New Zealand" was by far the best of available guide books. Not only is it light and portable, it is also extremely detailed. Plus, it "shoots from the hip" and mentions a lot of off-the-beaten-path things the other guides don't.
I recommend that, as a supplement, you purchase a detailed New Zealand road map, as "The Rough Guide" can't help you too much in that category.
Also, "The Rough Guide" doesn't have many photographs. You might want to choose your New Zealand itinerary using travel guides that are more photo-laden and colorful, and then leave those guides at home and bring "The Rough Guide" with you to New Zealand.
I recommend that, as a supplement, you purchase a detailed New Zealand road map, as "The Rough Guide" can't help you too much in that category.
Also, "The Rough Guide" doesn't have many photographs. You might want to choose your New Zealand itinerary using travel guides that are more photo-laden and colorful, and then leave those guides at home and bring "The Rough Guide" with you to New Zealand.
Not Rick Steves
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-04
Review Date: 2006-11-04
I was looking for a Rick Steves like guide to New Zealand - a book that concisely told where to go and where not to go. I had heard that other Rough Guides were like that, but this one is like most guide books - tells about everything with recommendations about what's best, hard to find. A good book to use as a reference but not quite what I was looking for.
Easy to read, easy to use
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-07
Review Date: 2006-11-07
Not only does this guide provide extensive recommendations for places to say, places to eat, and activities, it's also very well written. This book includes clear, detailed descriptions that really help you decide where to go, what to see, and what to skip. An indispensible travel guide for anyone headed to New Zealand, whatever your budget.
Indispensable Guide for New Zealand
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-01
Review Date: 2006-11-01
We brought 3 guides for 6 weeks in New Zealand - Rough Guide, Lonely Planet and Eye Witness. Soon we were only consulting Rough Guide - for lodging, meals and places to visit. The others stayed in the trunk of the car. Particularly good were the author's distillations of what was most important to see. While at Orakei Korako to see an example of geothermal activity, we encountered a group of U.S. geologists who had chosen to tour only O.K. after a mining conference in Australia. It was great to have contact numbers for rafting companies or wildlife spots such as Royal Albatross Center or Penguin Place so we could easily schedule tours to those places well in advance of arriving in the vicinty. Staying in Arrowtown rather than Queenstown or spending several days in Wanaka would not have occurred to us except for the Rough Guide's Advice. Even 6 weeks in New Zealand isn't enough for that country - we hope to use a future Rough Guide for our next trip.
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Related Subjects: New Zealand Australia
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During his life my father, HQ Coy - Special troops, 32nd Infantry Division, He did not speak much about his service.
This DVD provides insight of the trials and tribulation
and commemorates his New Guinea service. It is a good sound rendition of the book "GhostMountain Boys".
He did not talk much about his WW2 service.
He did, however, march on ANZAC Day commemoratiomns with Australian vets he fought alongside at Gona and Buna. Purple Heart awarded there. Returned to recover at Townsville and returned to go to Leyte and the Grosse Verde Trail and then into recover Manila. Another Purple heart there and then onto Japan after the surrender and demobilisation.
Charles Schuster,
Australia