New Zealand Books


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New Zealand Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

New Zealand
Cleared Out: First Contact in the Western Desert
Published in Paperback by Aboriginal Studies Press (2005-10)
Authors: Sue Davenport, Peter Johnson, and Yuwali
List price: $40.50
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Average review score:

In The Shadow of the Nuclear
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-02
Here is an excellent documentation of the continuing stories regarding the plight and fight of Australian indigenous peoples that have seen the light of publication since the 1970s. This, like so many, highlights the resilience, flexibilty and pragmatism of a band of Martu desert dwellers who have adapted to survive the settler society. Their stories historic importance is relative to the development of the atomic testings in their homelands immediately after the Second World War. Readers might well extend their understanding by referring to Yami Lester's account which was published by IAD Press nearly a decade ago. The book is attractively presented with ample photographs, which amongst other things, demonstrates that the material well-being of the surviving Martu has changed little since the 1950s. Melbourne museum's Philip Batty has curated a poignant exhibition, currently touring Australia, which also touches on some of this book's themes.

New Zealand
Climbing New Zealand: A Crag Guide for the Travelling Rock Climber
Published in Paperback by Posing Productions (2001-12)
Author: Alastair Lee
List price: $18.95
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Average review score:

A little overwhelming...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-06
for me, but with my gf's help, this should be a really great resource for planning our trip.

New Zealand
Common Insects (Mobil New Zealand Nature Series)
Published in Paperback by A H & a W Reed (1982-06)
Author: Annette Walker
List price: $6.95
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Average review score:

Excellent book, Brilliant pictures, Great as a reference
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1999-04-03
This book, along with the others in the series, provide the reader with useful information in a quick, accessable and well illustrated form. These books fit readily into a knapsac and can be easily carried in the field.

New Zealand
The complete Australian and New Zealand book of names
Published in Unknown Binding by Angus & Robertson Publishers (1984)
Author: Cecily Dynes
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Best book downunder...
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2000-11-09
Australia and New Zealand are lands populated by emigrants and this book reflects this. I was pleasantly surprised to see many Dutch names in this. There are a few Maori and Polynesian names but fewer than I would have liked. Ditto for Aboriginal Australian names. However the author does justify this using tradition. However some very common names have been missed out eg the Tongan "Anaseini" which is a translation of Anna Jane, "Lupe" which is in referring to another language but which is the Tongan equivalent of Ruth. The historical background of each name is given well. I do like the alternative versions including translations of names which this book gives, which I think is one of its strengths.

New Zealand
Confronting Sukarno: British, American, Australian and New Zealand Diplomacy in the Malaysian-Indonesian Confrontation, 1961-5
Published in Hardcover by Palgrave Macmillan (2000-06)
Author: John Subritzky
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Important Contribution to the "Konfrontasi" Literature
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-04-19
The Indonesian Confrontation against Malaysia represents a challenging case study for scholars, historians and political scientists because it takes place at a time when the conduct of international relations was influenced by ideas and interests which may seem alien today. It is hard, for instance, to separate Sukarno's genuine fears of neocolonial encirclement from his desire to exaggerate external threats in order to justify his "Crush Malaysia" campaign, and to separate the internal dynamics of a regional conflict from the broader antagonisms of the Cold War. This book fills in an important gap in the literature by chronicling the conflict from the standpoint of the Western countries, who are the "Nekolim" so feared by Sukarno. It offers important historical lessons about the potential and limits of overlapping multilateral security arrangements (Anglo-Malayan Defence Agreement, ANZUS agreements, Commonwealth, SEATO etc) in guaranteeing peace and security. The extensive network of alliances could act as a deterrent to aggressors, yet once deterrence fails (which it has and very well might again), the next development is always one of two evils: conflicts become escalated and involve many players, or someone must renege on a security obligation. The U.S., for instance, had distanced itself from its SEATO and ANZUS commitments for fear of being embroiled in the Konfrontasi crisis. This book describes diplomatic developments between the Western countries in useful detail. J.A.C. Mackie's "Konfrontasi" is still the best book on the subject from the M'sian and Indonesian angle. Djiwandono's "Konfrontasi Revisited" offers a view from the other side of the fence i.e. relations between Indonesia and the Soviet Union (as well as China).

New Zealand
Contemporary Jewellery in Australia and New Zealand
Published in Hardcover by Craftsman House (AU) (1998-02)
Authors: Patricia Anderson and Patricia Anderon
List price: $65.00

Average review score:

Contemporary Jewellery in Australia and New Zealand
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2000-04-30
This is a really thorough review of recent work in the two countries... with some familiar names and some lesser known artists. It's a nice change of pace from american and european jewelry.

New Zealand
Continent of Extremes: Recording Australia's Natural Phenomena
Published in Paperback by UNSW Press (1998-06)
Author: Ian G. Read
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Factoids for Pursuit of the Trivial
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-03-25
Interesting snippets and factoids about all sorts of natural and human phenomena in Australia. Want to know the deepest gorge in each State/Territory? Height of some well-known waterfalls? Longest road ascents? All the answers are here.

Nothing terribly profound, and it is not hard to imaging how much of a crashing dinner-party bore you could become if you start to recite 'interesting snippets. On the other hand, if you are a Quiz night afficianado, or compiler of questions, this is one of the tomes to have at hand! It could also be a useful addition to the primary or high school reference library.

New Zealand
Convict Maids: The Forced Migration of Women to Australia (Studies in Australian History)
Published in Hardcover by Cambridge University Press (1996-07-26)
Author: Deborah Oxley
List price: $64.95

Average review score:

Advance Australia More Fairly
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-18
This is a work of quantitative depth that redresses a series of alleged misconceptions about female convicts sent to Australia. Deborah Oxley argues that to understand Australia's socio-economic development one must first understand the nature of a large portion of its first settlers that has gone overlooked. She makes a convincing case. Her research engages a historiography that previously saw all convicts as part of a `criminal class', and it argues that female convicts were in fact heterogeneous and diverse in origins, and only marginally criminal, for the most part. This, she feels, helps to account for the fact that within a few decades after mass transportation began

convicts were successful in establishing a socio-economic
system which quickly replicated aspects of the Anglo-Celtic
culture that spawned the settlement. Moving rapidly to the
status of a "free society" in which female convicts laboured
as workers, wives, lovers and mothers. (12)

Her first item of business is to describe accurately what type of female convicts arrived to advance Australia fair. Generally speaking, these were not career criminals, but people guilty of petty crimes - usually theft - and convicted of crimes that in less merciful days would have carried a sentence of hanging or, in the case of the lucky and clergied, flogging. In any event, they were not members of a well established and at times romanticised `criminal class' of mythical fame. Accurate statistical data bear this out. And, unlike the formerly obedient American colonies where such criminals were sold as indentured servants, Australian transportees had to be integrated into a society in which they were expected to play more than an auxiliary role. It was a role for which they were surprisingly well suited.

After a somewhat tangential review of female convicts in literature, Oxley returns to quantitative analysis of the convicts themselves. Though they spanned a wide age range, most were in their twenties and not all were incapable of working in skilled professions - the English more than the Irish transportees. The majority was not completely illiterate. In fact, they closely resembled the working class comrades they left behind. They were valuable if not indispensable in light of the fact that the vast majority of British emigrants chose North America ahead of Australia to start a new life, and some four fifths of transportees were male. In time, forced Australian immigration was supplement with the aggressive recruiting of suitable free women; however, these were only slightly more skilled on the whole than their un-free sisters in the prison holds of Australia-bound ships.

That convict women have been so unfairly maligned is, in Oxley's opinion, the product of nineteenth-century literature about criminals. Though not a particularly profound point, Oxley spends a chapter elaborating upon this. At the very least it helps to fill out the book. But all's well that ends well, and Britain's loss of a pseudo-criminal `class' that also filled a literary need to decry female baseness and excess turn out to be Australia's gain.

This study draws upon a wide array of primary sources, the richest of which are the `indents' of the convict ships, containing detailed demographic and even anatomical data on the ships' human cargoes. She compares this to nineteenth century (mis)conceptions about convicts and invariably proves them wrong, along with the twentieth-century historiography that fell for such appraisals.

Oxley weighs her various evidence judiciously, but still seems inclined to accept most of her data as reliable in spite of some cause for potential inaccuracies. Her analysis, however, is chronologically weak. It initially stresses the importance of the merciful reforms of the criminal justice system of the 1820s without providing much information about how this may have changed the demographic or social nature of transportation, apart from accelerating it. Oxley also does not say a great deal about what happened to the convicts, or how they actually made early Australian society, once they arrived. She seems to assume that clarifying who these women were is enough to demonstrate that they must have largely underlay the successful society they helped to engender. This book's argument and foci also become rather repetitive, as Oxley frequently reiterates the historiographical significance of what she is doing and displays her evidence in ways that essentially rephrase her thesis - one, she notes, that is a continuation of an existing historiographical revisionism. Nevertheless, she does meaningfully enhance the some of the points this revision has been attempting to make.

Oxley's prose is vivid and replete with short, pithy sentences that engage the reader in her arduous task. However, it also emanates an annoyingly patriotic type of proselytising about a (more politically?) correct understanding of `our history', `our social origins', and `this country' typically becoming only of Canadian and, to a lesser extent, insular American left-wing nationalism. Her structure, as noted, is very comprehensive, although her engagement of a literary dialogue with quantitative analysis leaves the reader a bit unsatisfied at times. In the end, however, the evidence she presents speaks for itself and clearly demonstrates that however they served the new colony's needs after their arrival, Australia's female convicts were well suited to the task of forging a functional society.

New Zealand
Convict Workers: Reinterpreting Australia's Past (Studies in Australian History)
Published in Paperback by Cambridge University Press (2007-05-31)
Author:
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Average review score:

reaching back 2 centuries
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-24
Every Aussie knows that the first European settlers were involuntary. But in our history books, convicts are often a nameless bunch. What was life really like for them? The contributors to this book attempt to reach back into musty archives and reconstruct a bicentennial past.

Various aspects of convict life are treated. Including how female convicts fared in a society with far more men than women. For most convicts, conditions were often hard, especially in the early years, when starvation was a real threat.

However, in total, it was still better to be a convict than an African slave brought to the Americas. Convicts who served their sentences were freed and often prospered.

New Zealand
Crime Story
Published in Hardcover by Penguin Books (NZ) (1994-08-03)
Author: MAURICE GEE
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Average review score:

Crime Story with a twist
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2000-03-04
This is a crime story with a twist. Maurice Gee has presented this novel in a style I had not experienced before. The story is conveyed through his development of characters, their actions and the coincidental connections between them all. An interesting and easy to read novel from one of New Zealand's greatest writers, Maurice Gee.


Books-Under-Review-->Sports-->Equestrian-->Breeds-->Paint-->Breeders-->New Zealand-->75
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