Related Vacation Book Subjects: VacationBookReview asia austria Australian_Capital Australian_Capital_Territory New_South_Wales Northern Northern_Territory Queensland South_Australia Tasmania Victoria Western_Australia
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Books to read if you're planning a vacation in "australia", sorted by average review score:

Cycle Touring in New Zealand: Includes Both North and South Islands
Published in Paperback by Mountaineers Books (November, 1989)
Author: Bruce Ringer
Average review score:

updated edition
This book is out-of-print but, as the author, I suggest you put in a cross-reference to "New Zealand by Bike", the second edition, most recently revised in 1998. Thanks. N>B. Please note the author's name is Bruce Ringer not Brude Mirger.


A Dagg at my table : writings 1977-1996
Published in Unknown Binding by Hodder Moa Beckett ()
Author: John Clarke
Average review score:

Another great theft by Australia from New Zealand
John Clarke, aka Fred Dagg. World Class Farnarkler and humorist sees through the obvious to the sublime. Another New Zealander who now calls Australia home, Clarke has a better understanding of the Australian psyche then most.

If you cannot find this volume, get 'A Complete Dagg', another collection of writings over the same period. Sure they are a little dated now, but are definately worth finding.

One hopes his thoughts on the Sydney Olympics will also be collated.


The Dark Bright Water
Published in Hardcover by Atheneum (March, 1979)
Author: Patricia Wrightson
Average review score:

poetic and down-to-earth at the same time.
This book is a welcome relief from the same old England, middle-ages type of fantasy. The book includes wonderful spirits of the Australian outback and a great love story, too. The writing is beautiful and full of wonderful images.


Dark Heritage
Published in Hardcover by Gale Group ()
Author: Emma Darcy
Average review score:

Very good Darcy novel
from backcover: "Had she found her identity or her destiny? Rebel had been fortunate to be adopted by the James family. The Australian clan fully supported her search for her mother's roots--even though it took her to England. But when Rebel arrived at Davenport Hall, the English manor where her mother had stayed as a five-year old war orphan, she was surprised to discover the earl actually seemed to be expecting her...."


Daughter of Riches
Published in Hardcover by St. Martin's Press (September, 1993)
Author: Janet Tanner
Average review score:

Very Readable
I cannot believe no one has reviewed this wonderful book. It is one of the best I have read in a long time. Even though you may think you know the real secret in the story, you don't know who or why. The truth will shock you although the real killer did not have a very big part. Try it, you;'ll like it.


Dear Sun : the letters of Joy Hester and Sunday Reed
Published in Unknown Binding by William Heinemann Australia ()
Author: Joy Hester
Average review score:

Passionate and moving account of women's friendship.
Joy Hester and Sunday Reed were two important women in Australian cultural life of the 1940s. Hester was an artist and Sunday Reed, her patron.Their letters to one another span 1940-1960, the year of Hester's death. Reed's home was a focus for Melbourne's radical cultural life. Hester was Reed's best friend. When Hester contracted cancer in 1947, Reed adopted her son.Their letters chart the passage of Hester's illness together with Reed's love for her garden, books, poetry, art and friendship.Despite poverty and illness, Hester produced fine, expressionist drawings which are now in Australia's state galleries. Reed was her constant and unflagging audience.


Death of a swagman
Published in Unknown Binding by Arkon Paperbacks ()
Author: Arthur William Upfield
Average review score:

excellent introduction to Bony and Australian bush folklore
Death of a Swagman was written in the mid point of Arthur Upfields career and shows in his attention to detail and his ability to capture the feling of Australian country towns in the early part of our century. The story is a good detective novel in its own right with plenty of plots and action and red herrings. Bony's relationship with Rose Marie is used as a strong pivot point throughout the novel giving a useful viewpoint of the running of the town from a child's perspective. The advantage of this book over other bony novels is the character development of the subjects. This gives a depth and humanity which remains after the story is finished. The narrative of the swagmans lifestyle and its mythology is addressed here with great detail and provides a refreshing glimpse of a bygone era.


The Debating Book
Published in Paperback by International Specialized Book Services (March, 1996)
Author: Jeremy Philips
Average review score:

THE guide to debating
Written in an irreverent style with regular examples from the authors' extensive experience in world-debating, this book is an excellent guide to debating - for beginners, the experienced, the coach and the adjudicator.

Focusing on the Australian style of debate, the initial chapters on Manner and Method clearly set out standards expected, as well as mentioning pitfalls and recommendations. The chapters devoted to Matter, combined with the discussion on Topics & Preparation lends immediately the wisdom necessary to construct speeches with structured purpose as opposed to a series of nascent ramblings.


A Decade of the Sydney Mardi Gras
Published in Paperback by Stampyourself (01 March, 1998)
Author: Elio Loccisano
Average review score:

Happy gay and lesbian mardi gras!
whether you are a resident of Sydney, as I am, or a visitor, or just interested in a very vibrant part of Sydney life, then this is a terrific book.

The photographs are great. It is not a complete history of the Mardi Gras (now 22 years old) - there are other volumes that cover that territory - but it is a terrific 'slice of life volume.

The MArdi Gras festival lasts for 3-4 weeks in late summer (Feb-early March) each year, and culminates in the sequins and glamour, and political statements of the parade. This book is a worthy 'souvenir' of that very sultry time.


The decline of the age of oil
Published in Unknown Binding by Pluto Press Australia ()
Author: Brian J. Fleay
Average review score:

We are gravely mistaken in our assumption about oil supply
Brian J. Fleay is remarkable for having written a book which, without his having access to anything like the same resources, parallels the findings of $US32,000.00 'The World Oil Supply 1930 - 2050' published by Petroconsultants of Geneva. The World Oil Supply' is a three volume work which draws on Petroconsultants' database on the upstream oil industry, which is the most comprehensive in the world and which they have been building since the 1950's. (P) Basically, the scenario outlined is that we have been using a meaningless and dangerously misleading method of calculating our future access to oil supply. The method generally employed has been to add up what is thought to be the total extractable reserves of oil in the world, and then divide it by the world's annual consumption. This is called the 'Reserve/Production Ratio', and gives a figure, in years, of how long we have until we 'run out' of oil. (P) The fault in this method is that it assumes that the remaining oil can be extracted at a continuous rate, as though the oil were sitting in some vast underground tank which we can simply drain until empty. In fact, the oil is held beneath the earth in porous rock, and relies on the pressure in the oil field for its flow up the well and into the pipelines. As the oil is extracted, the pressure drops and the flow slows down. Obviously, this can be aided by pumping, but this does not allow the same rate to be achieved. (P) Mr. Fleay argues that only a full audit of the world's oil supply, such as that carried out by Petroconsultants, including a history of the production from each of the many thousands of fields in the world, can start to give us a picture of where we stand. This is because our most immediate problem is not going to be the total amount of oil left in the world, but the declining rate of annual production against a background of burgeoning demand. If the normal laws of supply and demand are allowed to be the only thing to set our future price structure for oil, we're in for a rocky road. (P) Mr. Fleay's book is very readable, thought provoking and somewhat worrying. It is remarkable that the concerns he raises are not much taken into account by people discussing such things as the 'Greenhouse' effect, or by business people for that matter. In fact, because the issue of oil supply affects everyone on the face of the earth, this is a book which should not be left unread by anybody.


Related Vacation Book Subjects: VacationBookReview asia austria Australian_Capital Australian_Capital_Territory New_South_Wales Northern Northern_Territory Queensland South_Australia Tasmania Victoria Western_Australia
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