New Zealand Books
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a match for Laura Ingalls Wilder's Little House Series!Review Date: 2006-04-16


Interesting analysis of human historyReview Date: 2001-10-23
An interesting example is that of the Mount Morgan Mine in Queensland. Black boulders, which cattle shied from, formed a low hill in the ranges. There was a gold rush a few miles away, but nobody thought to test the black hill, as the rocks were all wrong. Farmers sold the useless land the cattle didn't like. A lazy miner was sacked from his job, his wife pleaded for his re-employment, in return for the locale of a "silver mine" in the hills. A few savvy mine managers wandered into a black innocuous hill. They chipped away, took out leases over the whole hill (a wise move), kept it very quiet (another wise move). When samples were broken, there was more gold than black earth-it was assumed it wasn't gold but something else. They began to mine quietly away until a local newspaper noticed there was a phenomenal amount of gold leaving a nearby town. The word was out. Mount Morgan -the "freak lode" as described by geologists at the time-became one of the richest and mightiest gold mines on earth. It defied virtually everything known about gold mines at the time. Geologists were perplexed, but as long as shares repaid 413,000% of their value, the owners didn't care. The copper that got "in the way" of gold processing eventually amounted to about 250,000t of copper. It was mined for around 100 years, and money that came from the mine was used to find oil in the Middle East, which eventually formed the company BP. Mine owners declared in World War 1, that Mount Morgan money was used to fight the Germans. In the 1950s over half of Great Britain's revenue came from oil discoveries that were originally financed by one small black hill in the outback of Australia.
The world's largest resource of lead and zinc-the Broken Hill Lode-is another case in point. For some years in the 1800s a large, jagged hill of black boulders more than a mile long and 500 feet wide was ignored by local prospectors at the nearby silver rushes at Silverton. A surveyor's fence was put across it. A trig station crowned the summit. Samples were chipped which came back high in uninteresting lead, but little else. It wasn't near any main thoroughfares. The owner of the land wasn't interested in prospectors. It was too big to be a lode. A good lode was said to be five feet wide, Broken Hill was over 500 feet wide. The rocks were wrong. So numerous hopefuls mined the molehills, whilst the mountain was ignored.
When people finally got around to examining it, a few speculators bought and sold shares, making a few bucks, as the hill guarded its riches. Finally, when a shaft was sunk on the wrong rock type-white kaolin-bonanza silver assays came back and the hill was born. The first 48 tons produced about 36,000oz of silver, which in the 1880s, was a lot of dough. The ensuing stock market mania and mining development transformed Australian history. Over $AUS 70 billion has been taken from the hill to the 1990s.
There are many other similar tales, twists and turns- the vagaries and tides of history. Curiously and well written, it is recommended for those interested in history, particularly Australian, or those simply interested in curious human anecdotes of life.
Used price: $54.62

do not forget thisReview Date: 2000-05-04
In short it is a long book, but a good book and certainly one that helps to remind us that there are those that we should not forget.


An Excellent Classroom ResourceReview Date: 2004-04-30
The additional parts at the back of the book (the cultural and pronunciation guides and the glossary) provide some valuable support information for teachers and learners.

Australia's Early Foreign PolicyReview Date: 1998-07-15

Used price: $4.88

Anti-Environmental PR Campaign ExposedReview Date: 2000-08-20
The book makes use of the leaked documents to illustrate how environmental groups were infiltrated, and attempts made to neutralize them. Details of how sources of funding were targeted, and the use of legal threats or "SLAPP suits". It documents the people who actively assisted the company, as well as those who were unknowingly recruited in support. The setting up and methods of control of supposedly independent front groups is revealed in the leaked PR documents. In North America the "wise use" groups fit this model. The manipulation of the media is detailed. Friendly press were given all-expense paid tours of model logging areas, for which positive publicity was expected. Complaints were sent to the employers of journalists who wrote stories unfavorable to logging.
"Dirty tricks" are exposed. The planting of a fake bomb and the destruction of a tree-sitting platform with a log slung from a helicopter are exposed through subsequent cover ups and attempts to influence an investigation by aviation authorities.
I rate this book highly because of the unique portrait of an anti-environmental campaign, and it's relevance to campaigns in North America.

THE How-to Book for PottersReview Date: 2003-05-02
I checked this book out of the library years ago. Since then, someone has stolen the library's copy. I have been looking for a copy for years. If you find a copy, I strongly urge you to buy it.

Used price: $58.18

One of a kindReview Date: 2006-03-05
It is captivating, informative and is a great contribution to Scottish and Australian history, especially in its focus on individual, migrant histories.
The author has captured the true essence of the Westralian Scots, and illustrates that whilst they were small group of migrants, their passionate and strong sense of Scottish idenity was not lost or absorbed, but rather, celebrated. Whilst the book focuses on personal histories, it also has a sense of fun, delving into the lives these Scots with excerpts relating to their songs, drinking and reading. This book is perfect for anyone with any Scottish roots or an interest in Scottish migration. It's well developed, alluring, and the best history book I have ever read.
I highly recommend this book.

Alas that Gaelyn will write no more books about Oppy!Review Date: 1999-10-05

Used price: $78.16

Brilliant, compassionate anthropologyReview Date: 2007-12-29
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Elsie Locke was a New Zealand author based in Christchurch, this is her most famous and best book. She had read about the Phipps/Small family in some books about early New Zealand Settlers and decided to follow up the story. She found out what she could from the grandchildren of the original settlers and checked up on records. It has been fictionalised what she didn't know, but the detail in it is superb. You really feel like you know and understand early New Zealand in general and Christchurch in particular.
It is about a family, a mother, four sons and two daughters who make the decision to escape from an abusive father in Australia. They wait until he has gone on a droving trip for 7 days and make their way to Sydney where they hide out with a secret friend for a few days while they find passage somewhere else, anywhere else. They change their name and finally get passage on a boat to New Zealand. Only the eldest child, a daughter, cannot get passage and must remain with the friends.
The rest of the family escape to New Zealand, to Christchurch where the eldest two boys are set to work draining swamps and cutting flax to pay their passage. The mother manages to settle a small farm house in Governers Bay on the Cracroft Wilsons land with her youngest three where she establishs a small farm growing lots of fresh produce which she uses to better the family.
The trials and tribulations make sobering reading. Suriving on damper and oats for weeks on end, living in a single room in a thatched cob cottage. Young teenages having to alk 7 miles with produce to sell in Lyttelton, having only squares of greased calico over openings in the wall to make windows. The most incredible of it was the droving trip she took to the west coast going hundreds of miles with 30 odd cattle to sell on the gold fields, just the mother and teenage son. The hardship and responsibility of it all is sobering.
Elsie Locke has invested this story with a wealth of detail so you can understand the times much better. The detail never gets in the way of the story though. Pwerful, compelling and a great read.