Oceania Books


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

Oceania
Who's Upside Down?
Published in Hardcover by Linnet Books (1990-05)
Author: Crockett Johnson
List price: $16.50
Used price: $24.85
Collectible price: $39.00

Average review score:

we're ALL upside down!
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2000-09-13
This book is a scream, a howl, and a serious showing of how perception alters reality. The kangaroo thinks she is upside down because the picture in a book tells her so. She feels miserable. When her baby "corrects" the picture, everything is right again. The pictures are a delight.... especially the pictures of "YOU" standing around where you live, not doing much of anything! The expressions on the momma kangaroo's face are worth the price of admission.

Oceania
Wild Australia
Published in Paperback by Readers Digest (1988-10-01)
Author: Robert Dolezal
List price: $39.95
New price: $9.95
Used price: $1.67

Average review score:

awesome book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-26
This is on of the best Reader's Digest book on Australia, with unbelievable and stunning images on Australias nature (over 900) in a brilliant quality. This book helped me a lot in travelling outside the known tourist paths and find the treasures in the Parks and Nature. This guide to Australia's National Parks is very clear and detailed, wonderfully set up with maps and regions, with useful and clear explanation on the nature and wildlife. Even after 3 trips to Oz I still find a lot in this book, wherever I've been these places or not. Keeps me updated and curious about my next trip to Australia. Well recommended, and also a great coffee-table book (or tea-table in down-under)

Oceania
WINGS OF THE BULLET
Published in Paperback by Xlibris Corporation (2006-03-16)
Author: Rudy DePaola
List price: $19.99
New price: $14.63
Used price: $14.55

Average review score:

Wings of the Bullet
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-15
I have to state that I have a conflict of interest in this matter; Rudy DePaola is my father-in-law but for nearly 30 years I and my sons have been reveled by his stories. That said, I have to add that this is great story about an ordinary kid who went to war at age 17 and came home to become a educator, father and grandfather. This is Rudy's life with some "embellishment" and is a fun read from start to finish.

Men like Rudy and my own father, who won't write his story, are the greatest heroes of our time. They went to war as kids and returned as men who quietly and steadfastly built the modern society that, more or less, has propelled the whole world forward.

We will all be poorer when they pass on but this is a great chance to learn what they endured to give us what we have today.

Oceania
The Winners' Enclosure
Published in Hardcover by Simon & Schuster (1999-01)
Author: Annie Caulfield
List price: $14.00
New price: $40.27
Used price: $7.99

Average review score:

Sam,OF LONDON SW
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-28
This book is so funny I've really embarassed myself on public transport laughing aloud. Forget all other books about Australia, this tells you what it is really like in sharp, witty style. Buy it before you go there. definitely

Oceania
Wise Women of the Dreamtime: Aboriginal Tales of the Ancestral Powers
Published in Paperback by Park Street Press (1993-07-01)
Author: K. Langloh Parker
List price: $14.95
New price: $8.84
Used price: $3.81

Average review score:

Aboriginal Stories
Helpful Votes: 97 out of 98 total.
Review Date: 2003-08-02
I bought this book with the hope of finding something more authentic than some of the more popular books on Australian Aboriginal culture I'd read. Though these stories have been collected, translated and compiled by Anglo Australians, my impression is that the authenticity of these stories has been retained. I do believe my authenticity-meter is pretty accurate. However, I have no authority on the subject, and would love to see a review here from someone who does. In absence of such, I hope my review is helpful to others.

Each story is followed by Johanna Lambert's commentary. Lambert draws parallels between concepts in these stories, and myths of other cultures. She also explains the contextual beliefs of Aboriginal people in a way that I found helpful and seems respectful to me. At times the psychoanalytical perspective seems a bit forced when applied to these stories and Aboriginal culture in general. I wonder if psychoanalysis is universal enough to be applicable to something so ancient and whole in and of itself. For the most part, though, I found the analysis helpful, and if you don't, you can just read the stories and skip the analysis which follows.

If your exposure to Aboriginal culture from the women's perspective is limited to Lynn Andrews or Marlo Morgan, I highly recommend you read this book. Also a great book for anthropologists and students of shamanism or global spirituality. Or, if you enjoyed "Rabbit-Proof Fence," if you just like to hear about different perspectives than your own or want to understand the various people of the world, this book is for you. Recommended.

~heidimo

Oceania
Woman Suffrage in Australia (Studies in Australian History)
Published in Hardcover by Cambridge University Press (1993-07-30)
Author: Audrey Oldfield
List price: $99.00
New price: $96.60
Used price: $7.47

Average review score:

The Authoritative Source
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-01-03
For those interested in one of the earliest successful movements for women's suffrage, this book is a must. It is the best of the books on the Australian movement for its thoroughness. While there are more "fun" versions of the movements with oral history excerpts, etc., this is the book to turn to as the authoritative work on the subject.

Oceania
Wombat and Fox
Published in Hardcover by Kane/Miller Book Pub (2008-09-01)
Author:
List price: $13.95
New price: $5.92
Used price: $4.29

Average review score:

Your right. His left.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-07
The old don't-judge-a-book-by-its-cover rule. It gets me every time. Of course I judge books by their covers! I'm a children's librarian with a particular kind of taste in titles. I know what I like and I don't have time to read and review books that don't look like they're my cup of tea. How does this system work out for me? Most of the time it seems to work out just fine. If I'm passing on fabulous books then I never know it because I didn't read them. I came half a sliver of a hair away from missing Wombat and Fox too. Oh sure, I gave the cover a little half glance but the art wasn't my style so I didn't think much about it. Someone had to really talk it up to me to get me interested too. Fortunately, the key to Wombat an Fox is that once you read even so much as a sentence, you are sucked in wholly and completely without a hope or a prayer of escape. So it is that I am head over heels in love with this smart and snappy little early chapter book from Australia, in spite of my continuing cover prejudice.

In three short stories we follow the misadventures of good friends Wombat and Fox. In "Wombat's Lucky Dollar", Wombat locates a coin on the side of the road that he is convinced will bring him luck. Unfortunately a run in with an angry ice cream vendor, a water rat, the Hippo Sisters, and others leads to nothing but trouble. Fox is convinced that the dollar is unlucky, but one wombat's misfortune can be a bandicoot's lucky day. In "Golden Cleat Fox", Fox discovers that he has a miraculous inability to kick a soccer ball into its goal. When the local Five Monkeys come by and steal the ball, Fox finds a way to accomplish all his goals, both literally and figuratively. Finally in "A Hot Night in the City", Wombat and Fox must endure an escalating series of adventures before they find a way to beat the seemingly inescapable heat of the summer.

The same person who recommended this book to me in the first place had a very good point about it that I'd like to paraphrase here. She said that there are some early chapter books out there that you read to children. They make for excellent teacher reads or bedtime stories but they're not necessarily something a child would pick up on their own for fun. Sheep And Goat by Marleen Westra or Toys Go Out by Emily Jenkins are excellent examples of this kind of book. Then there are stories like this one. Talk about readability. I could engage in long convoluted sentences to convince you as to why this book is so charming or I could merely reprint the book's first eight sentences instead. And since the first eight sentences were what convinced me to keep reading in the first place, it seems only fair to show them to you now:

"This is a story of what happened to Wombat on Tuesday. I could tell you about Monday, but nothing happened on Monday. So Tuesday it is. Wombat's phone was nearly out of minutes so he went to the mobile phone shop. He had never needed to get minutes before. He had no one much to phone. Except Fox. Only Fox always had his phone turned off to save the battery."

Part of the appeal here is that we are dealing with a story that feels as if it could be timeless, yet it contains some awfully contemporary ideas. It's a feeling not too dissimilar to the one I had when I read Paddington Here and Now by Michael Bond and watched the bear from darkest Peru travel in the London Eye. Sometimes a children's book will sabotage its timelessness by mentioning the hottest video games or coolest pop singers. That's bad. But like the Paddington book, Wombat and Fox contains modern references that do not date the book. Wombat has to buy cell phone minutes? That's almost quaint. And later, the water in a public fountain has been turned off because, "It had been a long hot summer, with water restrictions." Again it's a pretty contemporary note, but it works within the context of the narrative. So as it stands, this book is pretty darn timeless already.

Back to the writing; Denton has an almost off-hand style that suits the format particularly well. Breaking up his sentences with small pen-and-ink illustrations everywhere, one early section describes Wombat seeing something shining in the sunlight, "On the sidewalk, to his left. Your right. His left." And indeed the image accompanying these words shows Wombat facing the viewer with the coin on his left, your right. That is, until the next illustration switches the view so that you are behind him (clarifying how one person's right can be another person's left). It's small. It's understated. It fits.

Wombats are so perfectly situated to become the next big children's literary phenomenon (ousting the penguins from their chilly throne) that it's amazing to me that there aren't more wombat books out there. There is, of course, Diary of a Wombat by Jackie French and Don't Pat the Wombat! by Elizabeth Honey (which is a very funny, too little read book here in the States) but I'm fairly certain that average American joe schmoe/jill schmill isn't going to be able to tell you much about the furry little critters. At least Wombat and Fox gives you a couple facts to go on. Wombats clearly have a difficult time driving cars. They like to keep cool in the summer and they have problems with money matters in general. I don't think anyone is going to contest any of those points, so Terry Denton is on the ball as far as that goes. Foxes are a different matter entirely, and as this one is prone to wearing a mask and superhero cape I don't know how much we can trust him. Plus you have to feel a little bad for Croc who appears on the cover and in every story of this book alongside our two heroes but did not manage to get her name into the title. That's gotta hurt!

I mentioned before that Denton's artistic style, at least on the cover, was not my cup of tea. But his pictures grew on me. Inside the book the small details and brief two-page panoramas act as succinct little complements to every scene. Some kids who are reading early chapter books have the words down, sure, but they still need some pictures to help them along. In fact I get a lot of parents at my reference desk with children who will only read Captain Underpants. What can I recommend as the next step? I can recommend Wombat and Fox, a book with enough action and slapstick to amuse the Underpants fan but that also knows how to use a good plethora of pictures.

I don't expect Wombat and Fox hysteria to sweep the nation but I have dreams for this little book. I imagine it getting a small underground fan base. I imagine people thirty years from now reminiscing over reading it as small children, seeking it out at their local libraries. I imagine small Wombat and Fox online societies and maybe even Terry Denton's papers in a nice university collection. But even if only some of that happens, I can at least rest assured that no matter who I hand this book to, they will be instantly charmed. You cannot read this collection of three stories and dislike it. And how many books, honestly, can you say that about?

Oceania
Women and the Bush: Forces of Desire in the Australian Cultural Tradition
Published in Hardcover by Cambridge University Press (1989-08-25)
Author: Kay Schaffer
List price: $64.95
Used price: $32.00

Average review score:

woman and the bush
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-24
The book is an outstanding analysis of the history of Australian Literature.According to the author, in 19 century travel guides and writings,women figures scarcely appeared in male-writings.Many writings portrayed men as 'Australian legend', 'a bush man' or a 'rough and tough man'. Australian character has taken various forms and varieties through the national history but women have been kept aloof or have been absent somewhere in the bush. The bush has been typically imagined as a feminine landscape and `Woman', most of the time is seen carrying the burden of this metaphor. Australian figures of woman do not appear in the discourse of national identity. Kay Schaffer has delved deep into the fiasco of 'identity' on personal,social and national level and have brilliantly exposed the metaphoric reality of identities with help of Lacan's theory. The book is a must read in order to understand how identities are created within the culture and language and reflected in literature!

Oceania
Working Women and Socialist Politics in France, 1880-1914: A Regional Study
Published in Hardcover by Oxford University Press, USA (1986-04-10)
Author: Patricia Hilden
List price: $164.99
New price: $9.70
Used price: $12.13

Average review score:

a must read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-07-03
This book was a tour de force of finding the "lost" voices of women when it came out twenty years ago. Oxford keeps it in print, and it remains as important as when it was first published -- showing how women stayed in the workforce despite raising families, how they were major, not seldom primary, actors in socialist politics despite endless claims to the contrary, and how political self-interest and historiographical laziness have worked to silence their economic, political and historical roles. Based on in-depth archival research, this book remains THE corrective to so much rehashed second-hand argument.

Oceania
The World Guide 1999/2000: A View from the South
Published in Paperback by Oxfam (1999-07)
Author:
List price: $39.95
New price: $61.07
Used price: $1.75

Average review score:

Written by people from the South, for people in the South
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-26
This detailed, well-organized reference provides a guide to all the countries of the world from the perspective of the South. Most of the contributors are from the developing world, and the work is coordinated by the Instituto del Tercer Mundo in Uruguay. Don't be fooled by your gut reaction that a book can't be readable and rigorous unless it's published in New York, however. This is one of the better geopolitical reference sources in print by any standard. The country profiles provide unparalleled historical summaries of developing nations, along with truly relevant statistics. It also provides analyses of current global issues, such as food, health, education, poverty, habitat and human welfare.


Books-Under-Review-->Sports-->Equestrian-->Racing-->Harness Racing-->Tracks-->Oceania-->51
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