Australia Books


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

Australia
Australia Suite: For Late Intermediate Piano (Composers in Focus)
Published in Sheet music by The FJH Music Co. (2000)
Author: Lauren Bernofsky
List price:
New price: $2.50

Average review score:

Great, colorful piece for advanced students.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-04
Lauren Bernofsky is an award-winning modern composer who writes in an accessible style. Each of the seven movements in this delightful suite is named for an animal or feature of Australia: "The Great Barrier Reef," "The Paltypus," "Rainbow Lorikeets," etc. The music is evocative, witty, and sometimes impressionistic. Students will love to practice and perform this piece, which is an excellent introduction to contemporary music. Samples of Ms. Bernofksy's music can be heard on www.laurenbernofsky.com

Australia
Australia the Beautiful Cookbook
Published in Hardcover by Collins Pub San Francisco (1995-06)
Authors: Elise Pascoe and Cherry Ripe
List price: $50.00
New price: $99.00
Used price: $9.75
Collectible price: $50.00

Average review score:

Beautiful pictures, multi culture recipes, lots of fish!!!!!
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 1999-09-29
Not just a book about kangeroo steaks and gator burgers like I thought. All the imigrants have added to the Australian cuisine, so you get Thai, Italian, Vietnamese and lots more! Gorgeous pictures as most "Beautiful cookbook" collectors like me :-) will know. You get lots of fish, lots of low fat lots of spice.

A "must have" for your kitchen, you get about ten cuisines in one.

Australia
Australia's Age of Iron: History and Archaelogy
Published in Paperback by A Sydney University Press Publication (1994-06-30)
Authors: Ian Jack and Aedeen Cremin
List price: $49.95
Used price: $11.99

Average review score:

Metal Pioneers
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-04-04
"Australia's Age of Iron" is unique in drawing together the historical and archaeological information on the early development of iron smelting in Australia. Due to Australia's comparatively recent European settlement (since 1788) industrial archaeology has a short perspective and has been largely neglected until recently. This book provides the basic information on the earlist attempts at establishing an iron industry and a review of the archaeological investigations. Jack and Cremin give a short introduction to the iron extraction traditions which contributed to the Australian scene, and then trace the history of the history of the various 19th century attempts to establish iron smelting and manufacturing operations. They also provide accounts of the archaeological situation of each of the sites. They document how the the economic survival of the local iron operations, particularly smelting, was dependent upon government support due to the difficulty of the 'infant ' industry becoming competitive with the cheap imports from long established European and North American manufacturers. The book is well illustrated with maps, period photographs of the pioneer iron works and modern black & white photographs of the sites. While the it is comparatively short at xiv + 175 pages it is comprehensively referenced and indexed. It covers a great deal of material and fills a major gap in Australian industrial archaeology. It is expensive, but worth the money, as there is nothing else available in this area.

Australia
Australia's Battlefields in Viet Nam: A Traveller's Guide
Published in Paperback by Allen & Unwin (2004-04-01)
Author: Gary McKay
List price: $22.95
New price: $18.59

Average review score:

Great Overview of Vietnam (and war)
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-21
Author McKay has provided for the reader a brief synopsis of the geographical regions of interest in Viet Nam and tied them to their historical importance in Australia's participation in the "American War", the war in Viet Nam. This is recommended reading for the armchair historian, wishful traveller, or anyone trying to connect with the time, the era, or, as happened in my case, with my father whose death during TET in 1968 is surprisingly described in some detail. What Gary McKay writes parallels that which I was told as a young man when he was killed. A great book!

Australia
Australia's China: Changing Perceptions from the 1930s to the 1990s
Published in Paperback by Cambridge University Press (1998-01-13)
Author: Lachlan Strahan
List price: $39.99
New price: $28.00
Used price: $31.16

Average review score:

Strahan's Masterpiece
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-10-25
Dr Strahan's masterly review of changing Australian perceptions of China is nothing short of miraculous. My only comment is that Dr Strahan neglects somewhat the role of the Collingwood Australian Football Club in Australia - China relations in favour of the less important and quite frankly overrated Carlton.

Australia
Australia's Last Explorer (Great Travellers)
Published in Hardcover by Faber and Faber (1970-07-13)
Author: Geoffrey Dutton
List price:
Used price: $11.75
Collectible price: $45.00

Average review score:

Well-written life of explorer Ernest Giles
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-28
This short work by accomplished historian Geoffrey Dutton, which fell apart in my hands as I was reading it (as Seal paperbacks of this age are wont to do!), provides an entertaining account of the unusual life of explorer Ernest Giles. There are several aspects of Giles' life and explorations that make him an interesting character to study, particularly the combination of his poetic nature and sturdy constitution. The former allowed him to pause and reflect on the hardships he experienced in Australia's harsh interior, and at the same time appreciate something of the extraordinary savage beauty of the McDonnell Ranges and other landscapes with which he became all too familiar, and the second allowed him to survive and bring the majority of his expedition members and animals through safely as well. That he led five such major expeditions into central and western Australia is a tribute to his stamina and perseverance. As Dutton notes, it is extraordinary to think that, after narrowly escaping with his life in that waterless place, he could think of returning straight back into the same desert region, as he did on more than one occasion.

Although he failed to understand the aboriginal populations through which he passed, and at times was at loggerheads with them in a way which was to become all too common later as the desert areas were opened up by pastoralists and miners, his many qualities make him a fine man and pre-eminent explorer in other ways, and Dutton pays fitting tribute to a personage who was, no doubt, the last real explorer on the Australian scene.

Australia
Australia's Lost World: Prehistoric Animals of Riversleigh
Published in Hardcover by Indiana University Press (2001-03-01)
Authors: Michael Archer, Suzanne J. Hand, and Henk Godthelp
List price: $39.95
New price: $22.00
Used price: $11.70

Average review score:

'Downunder' fossil extravaganza.
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2001-10-24
Riversleigh is a major World Heritage listed fossil site, primarily discovered in the late 1970s in Queensland, Australia. Since the first discoveries an abundance of prehistoric Australian fauna dating from 25 million years ago to the present has been recovered, preserved in limestone sediments and ancient caves, which testify to a formerly lush rainforest climate prevalent as Australia drifted north from Antarctica. It is unfortunate that most of Australia's present day, rather unique animals are in fact, just a remnant of what once was, when formerly higher rainfall spanned much of the continent. Many lineages and individual species, represented by the abundance recovered at Riversleigh, are now extinct and forgotten, except of course by a few enthusiastic palaeontologists, as described in this book. Readers will be surprised and delighted at the peculiar forms and fantastic colour illustrations and reconstructions presented in this book, and what things can be learnt of their extinction over time, as Australia drifted north.

Exquisitely illustrated, with on-site field notes and diagrams should keep the enthusiastic amateur fossil hunter entertained. An abundance of technical notes, photographs of real specimens and colour reconstructions, many of which uphold Australia's reputation for the unusual and/or the alternative, in terms of evolutionary development. Evolutionary experiments abound with examples which include 'thingadonta' (nobody really knows what it is), several species of marsupial lion, Tasmanian 'wolf' (thylacine) ancestors, flesh-eating kangaroos, several failed lines of kangaroos, several platypus ancestors, giant marsupials such as Diprotodon-the world's largest, a giant wombat, koala ancestors, numerous bats, possums, and creepy critters of all types, are presented. No primates unfortunately, and no bears or dogs, but it is interesting how some of these vacant evolutionary niches were filled by marsupial alternatives-especially in the case of the 'Tasmanian wolf', and the carnivorous marsupial 'lion'. And it is interesting to speculate what kind of alternative type of 'marsupial primate' may have (could still!) have arisen. An upright 'hominid'-like marsupial, wandering the Australian plains-who knows if Australian rainforests hadn't have all but disappeared.

The book puts the various animals and lineages into perspective, describing the changes of climate and habitat loss over the last 25 million years as Australia's climate became drier as the continent drifted north. Many lineages were/are in slow decline before the arrival of the aborigines and Europeans, as Australia's rainforests progressively shrank.

The colour illustrations and landscape reconstructions are a major feature, and they are outstanding. This book is highly recommended for the enthusiastic fossil hunter, or for those just curious in Australian animals and palaeontology in general.

Australia
Australia's ships of war
Published in Unknown Binding by Angus and Robertson Publishers (1975)
Author: John Bastock
List price:
Used price: $433.87

Average review score:

Excellent. A complete summary of Australia's naval history
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1999-01-31
An excellent book, full of facts and historical items. Excellent photos of the ships of the RAN.

Australia
Australia's Spectacular Cowries: A Review and Field Study of Two Endemic Genera--Zoila and Umbilia
Published in Hardcover by Odyssey Publishing (2004-07)
Authors: Barry Wilson and Peter Clarkson
List price: $125.00
New price: $288.68
Used price: $189.95

Average review score:

Australia's Spectacular Cowries
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-11-24
This book is nothing short of spectacular! I am fully impressed by the photography, the artistic layouts, color schemes, map layouts, attention to detail and overall balance betweena art and science. Notwithstanding, the scientific text and information presented in this beautiful monograph is cutting edge, but the overall impression given to the reader is that you're looking at the finest work ever published and dedicated to this paricular subject. Shell collecting, in and of itself, represents a very small microcosm in zoology, but Australia's Spectacular Cowries has elevated this science to a great new and higher level. Mr. Jackson should be commended for an excellent job, and I believe that this work has raised the bar for all other publishers attempting to capture the essence and soul of shell collecting. This book is truly a piece of art! I have never seen any work on the subject that even compares to this effort. Many others I know will want to share and appreciate the pleasure of owning this top of the line jewel for decades to come.

Australia
Australia's trotting heritage
Published in Unknown Binding by Standard Bred Publications (1977)
Author: Max J Agnew
List price:
Used price: $76.56

Average review score:

Great book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-08-04
This is a fantastic book. It's very informative and has great photos of harness horses from our past. Recommended reading.


Books-Under-Review-->Sports-->Equestrian-->Breeds-->Paint-->Breeders-->Australia-->72
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