Australia Books
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Excellent book with many original gamesReview Date: 1999-04-11
definitely, a classicReview Date: 1996-09-25
A Must Read for all Game PlayersReview Date: 2003-08-27
Outstanding - lots of great new games for you to playReview Date: 1999-05-03
The games are a mixture of "forgotten" games, new games invented by friends of Sid, as well as lots of games invented by the author. Many of these games have subsequently been published in a boxed format by major companies, but this book gives you a chance to try them out at no cost.
There are simple games, solitaire games, serious strategy games, party games for 20 or more people, and everything in-between.
My favourites in the collection include a 2 player card game of pure skill ("Mate"), a card game that resembles Canasta but which is rather more fun ("Paks"), a scrabble-like pencil and paper game ("CrossWords"), and a game called Focus that is 2 or 4 player strategy game that weakly resembles a cross between checkers and Shogi.
If you love games, then you should have this book. If you don't, then buying this book just might change your mind!


very interestingReview Date: 2007-03-19
most inspiring 20th century architectReview Date: 1997-03-26
Great documentationReview Date: 2003-12-23
Well, get out the magnifying glass, 'cause here they are! Unlike most architectural monographs, this one actually gives us some insight into how these designs were actualized...highly commendable.
Murcutt's work speaks for itself, but the format of this book would win with any architect...unless they don't want us looking too closely. Hmmm.
One warning: In the best of all possible worlds, we'd all have full size copies of Murcutt's documents at our local libraries. Here on Earth, however, we must settle for books like this one which reproduce the originals at half (or even quarter?) scale. So, that quip about the magnifying glass was not a joke.
Rogers? Foster? Meier? Murcutt!Review Date: 1999-09-03
note: green can look really cool!

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Greater Nowheres mMost Entertaining Travel Book I've ReadReview Date: 2007-07-17
An Author Introduces His Book Review Date: 2005-11-12
"Delightful... Finkelstein and London write well. Their account is filled with engaging descriptions of beautiful, forbidding landscapes, the tough bush boys they meet and the lore of the Godforsaken town...[Their] trip is not for every traveler. But their book is."
-Chicago Tribune
"The reason to read this book is the myriad brief encounters, many of which are hilarious."
-Los Angeles Times Book Review
"...a fine volume in the literature of unpleasant but enlightened travel."
-Outside Magazine
"Always exciting, sometimes hilarious... The perfect gift for the armchair traveler."
--Travel & Leisure
"The book is laugh-out-loud funny. [The authors] have a good ear for looney pub chatter...and a deft touch for characterization."
--San Francisco Chronicle
"Authors Finkelstein and London earn a resounding wow! 'Greater Nowheres [is written] with such engaging observation, detail, style, humor and occasional salty language that readers can experience the Outback without leaving home, while laughing out loud."
--Ridgecrest (CA) News Review
"Most of this entertaining and well-written book consists of conversations with vivid characters: stockmen, aborigines, 'roo' hunters, bushrangers, pioneers, escapists, and lunatics. The humor, the resilience and 'mateship' of these free-spirited frontiersmen is evident throughout the book: unforgettable people in an unforgiving land.''
--Library Journal
"A vivid book...bound to attract attention."
--Toronto Globe and Mail
"... gives us a rare view of the bush and its extremes of weather, of distance, and of character. You'll enjoy it even if you don't get there yourself."
-New York Post
"A pleasure."
--The New York Times Book Review
And here's how a press release described it:
Talk about classic returns. Dave Finkelstein and Jack London's immensely popular, wildly funny, and critically acclaimed book GREATER NOWHERES: WANDERINGS ACROSS THE OUTBACK, which was first published almost two decades ago, is back-this time in paperback and with a new introduction by Dave Finkelstein-to give delight to a new generation of readers.
The book is a must for those with a penchant for exciting adventure tales, as well as for armchair travelers and lovers of humorous "on-the-road" stories--in this case, off-the-road, "bush-bashing" stories--here brilliantly and poignantly told by two oddly compatible traveling companions, one the Irish romantic, the other the Talmudic rationalist.
Driving a Toyota 4-wheel-drive truck and armed with snake boots, an "esky" full of beer, and an insatiable appetite for adventure, intrepid journalists Dave Finkelstein and Jack London set out into the Australian bush in pursuit of the fearsome saltwater crocodile, a huge, notoriously dangerous reptile with an equally insatiable appetite for humans.
Though the "salties" prove elusive, in their travels the authors stumble upon a diverse and outrageously entertaining cast of dinki-di Australian characters-sun-hardened men and strong-willed women--eking out an existence in the croc's hardscrabble, primordial habitat: stockmen, aborigines, "roo" hunters, bushrangers, latter-day pioneers, escapists, and outright lunatics.
In ramshackle pubs along desolate stretches of dusty track, shantytown settlements in the middle of nowhere, and million-acre cattle stations hundreds of miles from their nearest neighbors, they experience an Australia rarely seen by the average traveler: dwarf-throwing contests, cold spaghetti sandwiches, even a regional rash called "Karumba rot"-the inevitable souvenir of a visit to the forbidding Gulf of Carpentaria, with its swelteringly oppressive tropical climate.
Yet, like no other observers before them, in their celebration of the Outback and its inhabitants, the authors (described by one reviewer as "at least as amusing as the extravagant characters they meet") get to the heart and fiber of the Australian soul, to the very essence of what makes Australia the unique and marvelous country it is.
As author Jim Harrison says, "GREATER NOWHERES is an absolutely wonderful book... a classic of travel literature. It's unthinkable that anyone would go to Australia without first reading this book."
Rich in the history and geography of a vast, fascinating continent, GREATER NOWHERES is also an exploration of solitude, mateship, contemplation, and adventure.
As for bio-data on the co-authors:
DAVE FINKELSTEIN, a graduate of Harvard Law School, had a legal career distinguished only by its brevity--one month. Fluent in Mandarin, he went on to become a Chinese interpreter for the U.S.Department of State--the first language student of his generation to qualify for that position--then the Ford Foundation's first China specialist. Now a freelance writer, he has written about political and wildlife issues throughout the world. His articles have appeared in numerous publications, including The New Yorker, New York Times, and Washington Post. A flamenco guitarist and avid fisherman, he also holds an 8th degree in Okinawan karate. He lives in New York City.
Until his death in November '06, JACK LONDON lived in Key West, Florida. His work appeared in Audubon, Sports Afield, the Miami Herald, and The London Observer.
Modern-day Mark TwainReview Date: 2005-09-06
Leon Day, New York City
First rate!Review Date: 2005-08-22

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New Zealand WaterfallsReview Date: 2008-01-30
A Guide To New Zeland Waterfalls - A must have for waterfall lovers!Review Date: 2007-10-20
This is a must have for all waterfall lovers and anyone living in or visiting New Zealand.
Scott A. Ensminger, founder of the Western New York Waterfall Survey.
Bryan SwanReview Date: 2007-02-08
A truly stunning guide, unmatched in its coverage of waterfalls Review Date: 2007-02-04

Tilman, my uncle's traveling companionReview Date: 1999-12-06
One of the last great explorer-authorsReview Date: 1998-04-07
Guilty laughs in Tilmans' companyReview Date: 2003-07-14
I would heartily recommend anyone to read the book, particularly if it is available, the Nepal Himalaya single edition, - great, great books for travelling minds (and soles..) so long as you can cope with the mountain of salt required to see some of Tilmans less emphatic points.
Exploration: life worth living.Review Date: 2000-01-20


A rare gemReview Date: 2002-10-21
Finer shows a mastery of every time and place in history. It is amazing that he can conver accurately and informatively Han civilization and then switch to an excellent discussion of Roman civilization. The same skill with which he reconstructs the governments of Sumer and Egypt is applied later to the constitutional monarchies and revolutionary governments in modern Europe.
Finer's masterpiece ought to be read by anyone interested in an objective study in how societies orgzanize themselves. It is a highly useful reference that should be owned by anyone who works with history on a regular basis.
UnearthlyReview Date: 2002-12-16
"If there were a Nobel prize for political science, Sammy Finer would deserve to win one for this extraordinary trilogy--a work of scholarship so broad in its sympathies, so ambitious in scope and so elegantly crafted that it leaves the reader gasping, literally, with astonishment and delight...[L]ikely to be read as long as Aristotle. No finer work of political science...has been published in this century."--The Economist
Best of the CenturyReview Date: 2003-12-28
A motivational message to prospective readers who are dismayed by the prospect of a three-volume set. You don't need to read all of it to get value for your money. You don't even need to read it in sequence (I did not). Perhaps the most accessible parts are in Volume III, especially Books IV ("The Re-creation of the State in Europe) and Book V ("Pathways to the Modern State"). From there you might want to go back to Volume II, specifically Part III of Book III, more precisely still Chapter 7 on "The Republican Alternatie: Florence and Venice," followed by Chapter 8 and its magisterial discussion of "Representative Assemblies." From there a natural course is back to Volume I and its discussion of Athens and Jerusalem (Finer is particularly good on the distinctive contribution to governance from the tradition of the prophets). This is a Western-centered view, and should not be read to distrct attention from Finer's extraordinary treatment of the Chinese, the Indians and the societies of the Middle East. But these are in some sense self-contained units and can be addressed on their own terms.
This backwards progression would leave for last the stuff that Finer put first: the "Conceptual Prologue," which is perhaps better understood as a summary and analysis. But whatever route you take, surely there is no end of riches in this extraordinary capstone to a great scholarly life, well lived.
more than comparative governmentReview Date: 2000-03-14
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One of my favoritesReview Date: 2005-08-12
Even though it's not likely someone of Morgan's age could write these memoirs it is still fun to read and imagine yourself in her shoes.
I came to love and care about each one of these characters (except ofcourse her Dad) and thought about Morgan long after the book ended.
Her courage and imagination was one of which I envied as a child.
The first part of the book is a little tough to get through, but once you do, you will be captivated by each of these characters that Georgia Savage portrays.
My hat is off to you Ms. Savage.
Growing UpReview Date: 2001-09-03
I read the first 5 words and I was hookedReview Date: 1999-04-06
I liked it. (and I read alot of books)Review Date: 1998-07-11
Of course this just cannot go on and Vicky's world is shattered by the rape. After being brushed off by all female relatives, she decides to run off. Younger mute brother James also leaves with her on the afternoon train to Surfer's Beach. Meeting with a band of other runaways, Vicky and James change their names and begin to mature.
It is a grand day when the newly renamed Max speaks. It is a tragedy when myopic Marcelle falls from a boat and drowns. Joss goes back to his father and Dawn wanders off in a drug haze. The other girl (whose name left me) gives birth but is devestated when it is given up for adoption. The babe is later stollen back. Morgan begins work in a whorehouse but leaves after the madame propositions her and she overhears people plotting to turn her in. So she runs to the House Tibet where the kindly old gentleman Xam lives. Here Morgan and Max are reunited with mother, but she agrees to leave them there.
Sure it all wrapped up too neatly, but I really felt a loss when I closed the cover on this book. I lived Morgan's maturation process as she took her first lover, watched as he abandoned her yet she still maintained a equnamity that was impressive.

Reading is not surrogate to thinkingReview Date: 1999-05-20
Brilliant Writing, Brilliant ThoughtsReview Date: 2003-01-16
But when he won the Nobel Prize, it was for Literature. When you read this book of essays, you will see why.
It is beautifully written and has all of Russell's virtues: clarity, wit, humor, forcefulness, simplicity.
Even better, it is a brief education in itself. Most of the essays were written just as the Great Depression was beginning, and Russell gets right to the heart of a problem Capitalists and Socialists do not usually address: How much work is needed, and what is the ultimate point? He constantly stresses that we do too much work, and most of it is unneeded, and makes life grim. He never ceases to remind us that we should work to live, not live to work.
He addresses this point in many ways--through economics, through architecture, through the then-raging problems of Fascism and Communism. And though he treats serious problems seriously, he always has time for the breathtaking perspective and the ligtht touch--as with the essay, "Man Versus Insects."
A wonderful, even life-changing book.
Must-read material for the man of the next century. . .Review Date: 1998-03-16
In Praise of this BookReview Date: 2003-11-05
Controversial philosopher and Nobel Prize winner Lord Bertrand Russell (1872-1970) has written fifteen scintillating essays on which to whet our intellectual appetites. These short essays were written between 1925 and 1935.
Russell writes in an elegant, readable, and understandable style. His arguments are well thought out.
These essays consider social questions not discussed in politics. The general theme that ties these essays together is that the world suffers from dogmatism and narrowness; what is needed is the willingness to question dogma.
These essays are a blend of philosophy with other disciplines such as psychology, economics, science, and history. All the essays are brutally honest and forthright. Each is packed with loads of wisdom. What's amazing is that these essays are as current today as when they were first written and their messages will probably remain relevant in the future.
My five favorite essays in this collection include the following:
(1) "In Praise of Idleness." Discusses work and the importance of leisure. In order to get an idea of Russell's insight that permeates this book, here's a sample sentence from this essay: "The morality of work is the morality of slaves, and the modern world has no need of slavery."
(2) "'Useless' Knowledge." Points out that all knowledge is useful not only that which has a practical value.
(3) "The Case for Socialism." Russell gives many arguments in favor of socialism, most notably the need for preventing war.
(4) "Western Civilization." Discusses its characteristics. Sample sentence: "I cannot escape from the conclusion that the great ages of progress have depended upon a small number of individuals of transcendent utility."
(5) "Education and Discipline." Sample sentence: "Education...must be something more positive than mere opportunity for growth...it must...also provide a mental and moral equipment [for] children."
In conclusion, this book is Bertrand Russell at his best. Enjoy!
+++++

ONE OF THE MOST THOUGHTFUL BOOKS I'VE EVER READReview Date: 2005-03-24
I wish I'd said that!Review Date: 2001-02-03
A Hidden GemReview Date: 2000-04-05
A delighful, inspiring story of how computers came about.Review Date: 1999-10-02

WOW!!Review Date: 2007-03-08
Innovative Beaded Jewellery TechniquesReview Date: 2000-11-03
Innovative Beaded Jewelry is absolutely a perfect title.Review Date: 2000-08-11
One-of-a-kind beadwork idea bookReview Date: 2000-06-18
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It is true that any Hoyle will give you instant access to many games, but all these games somehow have something special.
My own favorite is Haggle, a delightfull party game for birthday parties.