New Zealand Books
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New Zealand Books sorted by
Average customer review: high to low
.
Moonlight Drive
Published in Paperback by HarperCollins New Zealand (1995-11-29)
List price:
New price: $30.00
Used price: $32.71
Collectible price: $68.95
Used price: $32.71
Collectible price: $68.95
Average review score: 

Every Doors song? No, not really
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-31
Review Date: 2006-12-31
Come on Baby light my FIRE!!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1999-05-04
Review Date: 1999-05-04
This book tells you in great depth about the doors and the Jim Morrison story and how they decided what to call each song
and what to include in them, it is avery interesting book with facts you probably wouldn't of heard of in other doors related
books, so its a must for all door's fans.

Mosses and Other Bryophytes: An Illustrated Glossary
Published in Hardcover by Micro Optics Press (2000-11-01)
List price: $39.95
Used price: $325.00
Collectible price: $410.00
Collectible price: $410.00
Average review score: 

Arcane yet Awesome
Helpful Votes: 29 out of 29 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-06
Review Date: 2001-08-06
With absolutely stunning photographs and accurate definitions, this book is a landmark in publishing. The authors have created
an illustrated dictionary using state-of-the-art imaging techniques. The nearly 1000 color pictures, the majority photomicrographs,
are crisply reproduced. The book's strength is in presentation of details of cellular structure, so important for identifying
mosses and their ilk. This book will be useful for years to come. This is not a book for the beginner; without solid training
in general botany it is likely to be overwhelming, if not impenetrable. This is a reference book, not a text. For the beginning
student of mosses, however, it can be a stepping stone to mastering this fascinating group of land plants. The only caution
is for northern hemisphere botanists: almost all the subjects are drawn from the flora of New Zealand. Although the images
might illustrate a term well, a North American reader will never encounter most of the species depicted.
Mosses and Other Bryophtes
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2001-07-22
Review Date: 2001-07-22
This is a highly technical book. Brush up on your latin before you purchase it. Illustrations range from a few side views
of whole clumps to individual plant photos. If you are interested in the molecular structure, this book is for you.
Sold for Silver (Oxford in Asia paperbacks)
Published in Paperback by OUP Australia and New Zealand (1986-02-05)
List price:
Used price: $2.78
Collectible price: $18.79
Collectible price: $18.79
Average review score: 

A very moving autobiography
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2000-04-17
Review Date: 2000-04-17
I enjoyed this book because I like to find out about how world wars affect peoples lives. Janet Lim has lived a very sad
life but has always shown great willpower. She has always triumphed over several dangerous experiences. I would really love
to know how the rest of her life turned out.
A story of strength of spirit.
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 1998-10-30
Review Date: 1998-10-30
In "Sold for Silver" Janet Lim, a Singaporean Chinese, gives an autobiographical account of her life, from her early childhood
in China to the end of World War II. Janet Lim was an ordinary person whom in normal times would have led a useful but
undistinguished life. But what makes this book worth reading is that the times in which she lived were not normal at all.
In the twenty years related here she was confronted by a series of extraordinary challenges, any one of which could have
broken her. Sold to be a slave as a child, bombed at sea by the Japanese during the war, captured and held prisoner by
them, selected to be a "comfort girl," and then sentenced to be executed, she withstood these challenges and emerged
with her spirit intact. The events she experienced and the spirit she showed facing them make this book well worth reading.

The Transformation: A Novel
Published in Paperback by Picador (2006-06-13)
List price: $14.00
New price: $1.97
Used price: $1.48
Used price: $1.48
Average review score: 

"Nobody wanted a chignon, soon my skills would be obsolete"
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-05-10
Review Date: 2005-05-10
The Transformation is all about hair, and widows and Cubans, but it is mostly about hair. Set in 1898 with the century almost
gone, and the automobile coming, the story centers on the wig maker Lucien Goulet III - Manufacturer of Ladies' Imperceptible
Hair-Pieces and Gentlemen's Invisible Coverings. Escaping a shady background in France, the mysterious perrupuier has found
a new home in Tampa, Florida, a world of perpetual sunshine, oranges, mosquitoes, swamps, and the occasional hurricane.
Author, Catherine Chidgey paints a picture of Tampa as a happening place. The railroad magnate Henry B. Plant has just build the Tampa Bay Hotel, with its tangle of Moorish minarets and aches, "its Byzantine domes and its thirteen crescent moons, the Hotel resembles "fairy-tale" castle anchored at the water's edge. Taking a room in one of the minarets, Goulet takes advantage of the Hotel's wealthy clientele, while inwardly sniping at their self-indulgent, decadent ways. In tones of sycophantic menace, he declares that he can work miracles with "a hank of hair, glue and a net."
As Goulet relates his adventures in hair, his narrative interweaves with those of Marion Unger, a local widow and orange grove owner whose silver-blonde tresses so entrance Goulet, and Rafael Méndez, a young cigar-roller who has come to Florida to escape the war in Cuba. He too is drawn to Marion, and drawn into the dark side of Goulet's dream-weaving business: scavenging refuse tips for combings, and eventually scalping the dead. Goulet, whose obsession with Marion's hair, manipulates both and the transformation he determines to make for it, is the driving force of the plot.
The Transformation is obviously meticulously researched and it shows, especially in the pages devoted to Goulet's obsessive rambling about his past in France and his wordy discussions on the art of the perrupuier. Florida of 1898 in recreated in convincing, immediate detail. There is lots of attention paid to Rafael's background and his family back in Cuba, and Chidgey deftly evokes the political climate leading up to the Spanish American War, when the American soldiers were amassing in Tampa hoping to liberate Cuba.
Chidgey portrays Goulet as some kind of hair sucking monster, a man devoted to fakery and deception. In one instance he mocks a customer by employing two actresses to mimic her for his own entertainment. But as the book progresses, Goulet's gleeful inhumanity becomes almost pantomimic and unreal, a caricature of a self-made, foppish and dandified man. In the search for hair, he gloats, "Once I found a stillborn child, but the little hair I could recover was too downy for my purposes."
The Transformation is full of Chidgey's confidant commanding prose, and vivid atmospherics, but the meandering narrative often hampers the overall effectiveness of the book. This reader never really cared that much about the characters or what happened to them - they all seem to sink into the background, weighed down by the author's rather substantial prose. There should be at least a modicum of emotional payoff involved in this story, but Goulet and his obsessions swamp the narrative, sucking the life from all around him, and in the end neither his flighty customers nor most readers will really be that concerned or worried over his fate. Mike Leonard May 05.
Author, Catherine Chidgey paints a picture of Tampa as a happening place. The railroad magnate Henry B. Plant has just build the Tampa Bay Hotel, with its tangle of Moorish minarets and aches, "its Byzantine domes and its thirteen crescent moons, the Hotel resembles "fairy-tale" castle anchored at the water's edge. Taking a room in one of the minarets, Goulet takes advantage of the Hotel's wealthy clientele, while inwardly sniping at their self-indulgent, decadent ways. In tones of sycophantic menace, he declares that he can work miracles with "a hank of hair, glue and a net."
As Goulet relates his adventures in hair, his narrative interweaves with those of Marion Unger, a local widow and orange grove owner whose silver-blonde tresses so entrance Goulet, and Rafael Méndez, a young cigar-roller who has come to Florida to escape the war in Cuba. He too is drawn to Marion, and drawn into the dark side of Goulet's dream-weaving business: scavenging refuse tips for combings, and eventually scalping the dead. Goulet, whose obsession with Marion's hair, manipulates both and the transformation he determines to make for it, is the driving force of the plot.
The Transformation is obviously meticulously researched and it shows, especially in the pages devoted to Goulet's obsessive rambling about his past in France and his wordy discussions on the art of the perrupuier. Florida of 1898 in recreated in convincing, immediate detail. There is lots of attention paid to Rafael's background and his family back in Cuba, and Chidgey deftly evokes the political climate leading up to the Spanish American War, when the American soldiers were amassing in Tampa hoping to liberate Cuba.
Chidgey portrays Goulet as some kind of hair sucking monster, a man devoted to fakery and deception. In one instance he mocks a customer by employing two actresses to mimic her for his own entertainment. But as the book progresses, Goulet's gleeful inhumanity becomes almost pantomimic and unreal, a caricature of a self-made, foppish and dandified man. In the search for hair, he gloats, "Once I found a stillborn child, but the little hair I could recover was too downy for my purposes."
The Transformation is full of Chidgey's confidant commanding prose, and vivid atmospherics, but the meandering narrative often hampers the overall effectiveness of the book. This reader never really cared that much about the characters or what happened to them - they all seem to sink into the background, weighed down by the author's rather substantial prose. There should be at least a modicum of emotional payoff involved in this story, but Goulet and his obsessions swamp the narrative, sucking the life from all around him, and in the end neither his flighty customers nor most readers will really be that concerned or worried over his fate. Mike Leonard May 05.
hot, sultry and fantastically weird
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-08
Review Date: 2007-11-08
Hauntingly beautiful engrossing summer read. This book sticks with you like sweat hungry flies in the oppressive Florida humidity.
Captured the mood of the era just right and gave me all the seediness about it that I wanted. Enjoy this great off-the-radar
book with a mint julip in an old creaky beachfront house with hosiery draped over Tiffany lamps for optimum pleasure.

Truth to Tell
Published in School & Library Binding by Margaret K. McElderry Books (1994-04)
List price: $17.95
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $26.00
Collectible price: $26.00
Average review score: 

Teen Angst Half a Century Away
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2002-11-03
Review Date: 2002-11-03
This book shows that children in the 50's weren't as docile and obedient as your grandparents claim they were. Alice, the
main character, constantly bickers with her mother, who has unwillingly dragged her to New Zealand(of all places!). In places,
the book is sarcastic and funny, but I docked it major points for being rather boring in the beginning. Along with the normal
problems of moving and being the new kid at school, Alice has to move into an intimidating old mansion with a lady that hates
kids and an uncooperative, grumpy old man, and also discovers a mystery regarding her origins.
An excellent book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-04-20
Review Date: 2000-04-20
This book, Truth to Tell, is about a young girl called Alice who is being dragged halfway around the world by her mother,
who is going to help an eccentric old lady, Miss Emilia Fairchild, write a book about her house. Alice hates New Zealand,
and more, she has a stepfather. She struggles to find out who her true father was, for she looks like Len,her stepfather,
but how can that be? Her mother claims that her father was killed during the war, but why had she never met her father's
parents? Mrs.Fairchild then says, "It's a wise father that knows his own child," and Alice has to find out who her father
was, and, more importantly, who she is. I loved this book because it offers wonderful insight into a girl's struggles to
grasp a situation that's out of her control and find out who she is.
When the Pakeha sings of home: A source guide to the folk & popular songs of New Zealand
Published in Unknown Binding by Godwit (1992)
List price:
Average review score: 

Invaluable
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-12-31
Review Date: 2003-12-31
This book is an invaluable source book which documents the progression of New Zealand music (and New Zealand's own identity)
over the past 150 years. As a teacher I have found this book to be irreplacable and cherish it dearly. I have also seen Mike
in action and he is as talented as the book suggests. I only hope that I can track down recording of the songs (and Mikes
own records) as easily.
Exhaustive lists of locally-made NZ songs.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1999-02-23
Review Date: 1999-02-23
Mike spent several years in libraries and the Radio New Zealand record archives researching NZ songs. This book contains marvellous
lists of locally made songs:- colonial songs, around-the-piano songs, wartime songs, tramping songs, and all those songs
we heard on the hit parades and at parties and thought we had forgotten. He also has them cross-indexed to other lists
of all the records and songbooks where you can still find the songs. And for the academically inclined, the book also has
an exhaustive bibliography of books, articles and songbooks. Mike now travels New Zealand singing the best of these songs
live.
The White Rajahs of Sarawak
Published in Paperback by OUP Australia and New Zealand (1987-04-23)
List price:
New price: $28.95
Used price: $6.89
Used price: $6.89
Average review score: 

The Strange Story of Sarawak
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-05-05
Review Date: 2005-05-05
This is a nicely done bio of the three white rulers of Sarawak that will appeal to those who enjoy biographies and history.
J.B. Brooke, the first white rajah, is a character that today could only exist in a work of fiction. At the time, however,
he was typical of a small group of British adventurers and explorers who sought out intrigue in the remote corners of the
earth. Unfortunately, since the book covers the lives of all three white rajahs (they ruled altogether for almost exactly
100 years), it lack's sufficient detail of the lives of each of its three subjects. But overall: well-done and well-written.
Concise and informative
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-11-19
Review Date: 2004-11-19
Robert Payne has produce a short history of the Broke dinasty in Sarawak (in todays Malaysian part of Borneo). The book in
a concise and complete manner narrates the events that took place since James Broke first set his feet in the island of Borneo
in the mid-XIX until the territory joined the Malaysian Federation after World War II.
The story is fascinating enough and Payne simply states general facts in quite a neutral manner. Maybe the book lacks some footnotes and references but is well written and clear. A few photos (not as many as it would be desired) complete the text
The story is fascinating enough and Payne simply states general facts in quite a neutral manner. Maybe the book lacks some footnotes and references but is well written and clear. A few photos (not as many as it would be desired) complete the text
1,000 years of gardening in New Zealand
Published in Unknown Binding by Reed (1984)
List price:
Used price: $96.32
Average review score: 

1,000 Years of Gardening in New Zealand
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-07-19
Review Date: 2001-07-19
As a Planning Technician at Auckland City Council, Heritage Division, I deal with public enquiries and also internal enquiries
regarding heritage matters. Our natural protection includes: Maori sites, natural ecological sites, significant trees and
more. With regards to the Maori sites, this book is useful in finding out what sort of vegetation may have been present at
the time of the Maori inhabiting that area. Also, with regards to heritage buildings that still have the original trees and
what appears to be where are garden may have been, we can also "guess" what sort of vegetation was grown in this area.
We have been lent this book and will proceed to buy it through your site as a reference book.
Abandon Ship! : The Diary of Debbie Atherton, Welington 1968
Published in Paperback by Scholastic New Zealand Limited (2003)
List price:
Used price: $35.91
Average review score: 

An enjoyable fictional diary about a tragic disaster in New Zealand history.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-03
Review Date: 2008-05-03
This book is from the My Story series published in New Zealand, which is their version of the Dear America series. The books
are diaries of fictional boys and girls during important events and eras in New Zealand history.
In March 1968, when thirteen-year-old Debbie Atherton becomes ill with glandular fever, she is sent to stay with relatives to rest and recovery. During her trip, she reads a diary her grandmother gave her, about their ancestor's long and dangerous sea voyage as an immigrant to Australia, and learns about the hardships faced by the early settlers. When Debbie is well again, she boards the ferry Wahine to travel home to Wellington, but becomes caught up in its tragic sinking and must fight for her survival as her ancestor did.
This was an interesting book from the My Story series, bringing to life a tragic disaster in New Zealand history. Young readers who enjoy fictional historical diaries or novels about historical disasters are sure to enjoy this book.
In March 1968, when thirteen-year-old Debbie Atherton becomes ill with glandular fever, she is sent to stay with relatives to rest and recovery. During her trip, she reads a diary her grandmother gave her, about their ancestor's long and dangerous sea voyage as an immigrant to Australia, and learns about the hardships faced by the early settlers. When Debbie is well again, she boards the ferry Wahine to travel home to Wellington, but becomes caught up in its tragic sinking and must fight for her survival as her ancestor did.
This was an interesting book from the My Story series, bringing to life a tragic disaster in New Zealand history. Young readers who enjoy fictional historical diaries or novels about historical disasters are sure to enjoy this book.
Aboriginal Labour and the Cattle Industry: Queensland from White Settlement to the Present (Studies in Australian History)
Published in Paperback by Cambridge University Press (1994-01-01)
List price: $25.00
Average review score: 

A Piece of History
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-03-17
Review Date: 2000-03-17
I found this book to be very interesting reading, well written, and well documented. If you are interested in part of Aboriginal
History in Queensland this is an excellent book for this.
Books-Under-Review-->Sports-->Equestrian-->Breeds-->Paint-->Breeders-->New Zealand-->71
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The book is full of interesting facts and is well-written and recommended, but I would have preferred a more inclusive and in-depth look at the stories behind every single Doors song.