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To the Is-Land Review Date: 2007-05-01

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Shamanic Art ImagesReview Date: 2008-10-26
the aboriginal people of Australia and New Zealand. In looking at these line drawings, we get a sense of how
they perceive their world and express deep connection to their reality. I was also impressed by the sense of
"sharing" that this generous collection reveals. From a purely mechanical aspect, I believe the images will be
very useful, altho I wished for a few more in color, as well. It is easy to imagine using these images for all the
avenues suggested on the cover.

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Alexander Collie was a renown scientist from Scotland who did much to help the colony in its early days Review Date: 2008-06-08


Creativity beyond reasoningReview Date: 2001-03-28
An Angel At My Table is a worthwhile read for any aspiring author first setting out - Janet's way of writing is described with humour and insight. We are even told how Frank Sargeson seemed to be rather taken aback by the relative ease of her writing, not realising that, whenever he came within earshot she would start typing `This is the forest primeval, the murmuring pines and the hemlock speak and in accents disconsolate answer the wail of the forest' over and over again, alternating this with the slightly less erudite `The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog'. After all, she did not wish her mentor to suspect her of lack of productivity!
Though she only briefly refers to her many years spent in Seacliff Hospital, the mental anguish and emotional turmoil of these years clearly is shown to result in her greater self-awareness and appreciation. She writes: "I was taking my new status seriously. If the world of the mad were the world where I now officially belonged (lifelong disease, no cure, no hope) then I would use it to survive, I would excel in it. I sensed that it did not exclude my being a poet." At which point I put the book down, gave a great whoop of delight and danced around the room. You see, I, too, am a poet *wry grin*

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Outstanding scholarshipReview Date: 2007-11-19
The compilers have assiduously examined the Lambeth Palace files to make these available to those requiring information regarding the formation of the Anglican Communion in the Pacific.
A great achievement.
Doris LeRoy, PhD candidate, Victoria University, Footscray Park, Victoria Australia.

Definitive Primary Source History on Imperial RomeReview Date: 2007-12-15
On the first page of his Annals of Imperial Rome, Tacitus wrote that Octavian "seduced the army with bonuses, and his cheap food policy was successful bait for civilians." Tacitus' description of Augustus' transformation of Rome from a republic into an empire is most illuminating as well. "Upper-class survivors found that slavish obedience was the way to succeed, both politically and financially. They had profited from the revolution, and so now they liked the security of the existing arrangement better than the dangerous uncertainties of the old regime."
Sir Ronald Syme relied heavily on the work of Tacitus for his cogent narrative of Octavian's rise to power as Augustus. Syme's in-depth study of Tacitus' life and work was published in 1958. Tacitus' historical accuracy was doubted for centuries and Syme made a project of re-evaluating the accuracy of his historical writings. Syme believed that Tacitus was in a unique position to write about the birth and early political history of the Imperial period in Rome due to his very active political life. Tacitus had served as a senator, consul, and proconsul of Asia. In addition, he was known to be an excellent orator in his day. In his writings, Syme believed that Tacitus provided excellent accounts of Augustus' rise to power and his career as Rome's first Emperor.
Tacitus delved into the machinery of the new government, including Augustus' use of patronage as well as his many thwarted attempts at planning for his own succession. What Syme found was a man that grew very adept politically and whose political maturity rapidly developed at an early age. At eighteen, he was named as heir to Julius Caesar. He grew into the greatest Roman princeps spanning fifty-six years until his death. Augustus knew that to retain power he had to maintain the general consent of the governed. He astutely maintained order not by following the constitution or past precedent, but by using the tremendous resources at his disposal. Augustus kept the plebeians in check making sure they were fed, kept them amused with games, and constantly reminded them that he was protecting them from the oppression of the nobiles.
Augustus became the "leader of a large and well organized political party as the source and fount of patronage and advancement."
Recommended reading for those interested in Roman history, military history.
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It rules.Review Date: 1999-06-15

FASCINATINGReview Date: 2000-05-25


Science so I can understand itReview Date: 2004-07-06
Loved it

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Essential for journalists and historiansReview Date: 2000-04-23
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Janet Frame is New Zealand's best-known living writer. In addition to her autobiography she has written eleven novels, four collections of short stories, a volume of poetry and a children's book. Her books have won numerous prizes, includung the Commonwealth Prize for Literature in 1989 for her novel The Carpathians. She has been a Burns Scholar, a Sargeson Fellow, and has won the New Zealand Scholarship in Letters. She has also been made as Additional Member of the Order of New Zealand and awarded the CBE, an honorary doctorate in literature by the University of Otago, and is an honary foreign member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters.
--- from book's back cover
Angel at My Table (A Women's Press Classic)
The Envoy From Mirror City an Autobiography Volume 3