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AUSTRALIA BOOKS
Posted in Australia (Tuesday, September 7, 2010)
Written by Robert Macklin. By Allen & Unwin.
The regular list price is $19.95.
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No comments about Bravest: How Some of Australia's Greatest War Heroes Won Their Medals.
Posted in Australia (Tuesday, September 7, 2010)
Written by Philip Temple. By Auckland University Press.
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No comments about A Sort of Conscience: The Wakefields.
Posted in Australia (Tuesday, September 7, 2010)
Written by Alan McKee. By Oxford University Press, USA.
The regular list price is $24.95.
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1 comments about Australian Television: A Genealogy of Great Moments.
- This author has a talent for cutting through the rubbish that usually surrounds theoretical arguements and honing them to precise and comprehensible points. Each chapter is an informative and well researched arguement. This is the book for anyone who is interested in looking at today's cultural practices without traditional mantras like "tv is crap, its bad for you".
Alan is a lecturer in Media Studies at the University of Queensland, and if you get the chance to attend one of his lectures, take it. He manages to be fun (OH MY GOD...fun in academics!!!) without sacrificing academic credibility by concentrating on the important points and arranging them in an entertaining and informative way. Funnily enough his students tend to remember most of what he teaches them.
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Posted in Australia (Tuesday, September 7, 2010)
Written by Ann Thwaite. By Otago University Press.
The regular list price is $45.00.
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No comments about Passageways: The Story of a New Zealand Family.
Posted in Australia (Tuesday, September 7, 2010)
Written by Brenda Niall. By Melbourne University Publishing.
The regular list price is $32.95.
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No comments about The Boyds: A Family Biography.
Posted in Australia (Tuesday, September 7, 2010)
Written by Noeline Kyle. By Allen & Unwin.
The regular list price is $14.95.
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No comments about Writing Family History Made Very Easy: A Beginner's Guide.
Posted in Australia (Tuesday, September 7, 2010)
Written by Gary Nash. By Rosenberg Publishing.
The regular list price is $29.95.
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5 comments about The Tarasov Saga: From Russia Through China to Australia.
- I was involved in a novel when I purchased a copy ot the Tarasov Saga. I intended to keep it in reserve for when I finished the novel.
Out of curiosity I started reading the Tarasov Saga. Once I started the novel had to wait. I became involved with the story of a struggling mother and at the same time gathered a good understanding of what Russia must have been like at that time. The stort of foreign groups living in designated areas in China was also fascinating. The numerous photographs in the booked also helped me. I often found myself referring back to the photographs and maps to help my understanding. A good read
- I found the book most interesting especially because of the historical insights that the author shared about life in Russia, China and finally in Australia. The contrasts between life in the Far East and life now in Australia for Gary and his family is amazing and it is wonderful to note the appreciation he has for the differences.
I always love stories about people and what they have coped with in their lives. Certainly Gary Nash will have inherited some of the strong and stoic qualities that his grandmother showed. I found the book very enjoyable to read and the family tree was very useful to continuously revert back to as the story progressed. It has also been written in a very positive way and I would guess that this is why the Tarasov family managed to get to Australia and be successful. Most enjoyable - well worth reading!
- The Tarasov Saga is a very absorbing book, not only because of its account of a remarkable journey over 25 years of the extended Tarasov family, initially fleeing from Russia through China and the Phillipines to Australia, but also for the historical perspective of life in Russia and China in the first half of the 20th century.
I have known the author, both as a work colleague and a friend for over 30 years but, Gary being a very private person, all I knew of his background was that he was of White Russian origin and had lived in China before coming to Australia! The to read this book and discover the astonishing story of all that happened from the time of the Russian Revolution and its effects on the Tarasovs, individually and collectively, until the first of them arrived in Australia in 1949, made for compelling reading.I am not qualified to comment on Gary's literary style or technique, but the way he has portrayed each member of the family, their strengths and their weaknesses brought them to life so that, not only were they believable, but one could visualise their individual contributions to this saga. This book is about courage, determination and resilience, and what can be achieved by people who are single-minded and motivated to seek a better life after many years of deprivation and hardship. In particular, the reader is left in no doubt of the author's great affection and admiration for his Grandmother Aida and her monumental efforts to ensure that the family survived their epic journey and, bar one member, all be reunited in Australia. I thoroughly commend this book which is not only an enjoyable read but in an age where the refugee problem is a world-wide one, provides an understanding of the hardships and traumas that constantly confront refugees on the move. It is an intensely human story which reinforces basic values and beliefs, in an era where many consider these things to be unimportant. It would be nice to think that an enterprising producer might think that there is enough meat and drama in The Tarasov Saga to provide the basis for a film or TV series. It certainly has all the ingredients.
- This book details the adventures of a large family as they seek safe haven from communism. In the beginning of the book, the author's mother and father are living in Czarist Russia, where his father is an officer in the army just prior to the outbreak of World War I. The small family grows to five children during the war. As the revolution begins to take hold, the father joins the loyalist White Russians and is dragged further and further east with them. His mother is left to manage alone with the five children. As it became clear that, as White Russians, they were not welcome in the Soviet Union, the mother decides to make her way east with the children, although she had no money and only a vague idea of where her husband might be. After a series of misadventures in which she is forced to leave the children behind, she eventually finds her husband and gets all five children back with her in a city in China that had a large Russian refugee population. The entire family made its home in China for the next twenty years, until a second communist revolution made them refugees once again.
The story is quite well written, with amazing recall of details from long ago adventures. The stories describing everyday life in the Russian refugee communities of pre-Communist China provide a fascinating glimpse into a very little known way of life. On the one hand, it is amazing that the entire large family was able to make it out of Russia and then out of China, but on the other hand, it was precisely because they had so many people working together in the family that made it possible.
- If this were fiction it would sometimes be unbelievable, but it is a real life story of a remarkable family. Gary Nash captures the strong spirit of survival that infused his relatives in the difficult historical times of the Russian Revolution and Civil War. The mother's harrowing search for her children in a worn-torn land defies description, but Nash manages to write of it with sympathy but not sentimentality. The family escapes from Russia into China and when, finally, it seems that all their efforts have led to a 'normal' life, their adopted country in invaded by Japanese forces. A sojourn in a 'Displaced Person's Camp' in the Philippines follows, but finally, their journey to Australia gives them the new, settled life they had traversed the world to find. Natasha Lands Down Under
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Posted in Australia (Tuesday, September 7, 2010)
Written by David James McCartney. By Carrickfergus Borough Council.
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No comments about Ulster Jacksons: From Cumbria to the Whitehouse, Shenandoah and Australia.
Posted in Australia (Tuesday, September 7, 2010)
Written by Elizabeth Wood-Ellem. By Auckland University Press.
The regular list price is $49.95.
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3 comments about Queen Salote of Tonga: The Story of an Era 1900-1965.
- I sincerely recommend this book for all Tongans out there as well as those who are interested in discovering one of the most beloved Monarchs of our time. Queen Salote was not only a charismatic leader but also a progressive woman who brought Tonga to the forefront of the modern era by re-establishing its past. She restored the cultural pride of her people at a time when native cultures were suffering the ill-effects of Westernization.
This book will be a sweet recollection for those who were fortunate to witness her reign, and it will be a source of inspiration for younger generations who are seeking to learn about their themselves. Truly, a remarkable book for a most remarkable person!
- Tonga is a unique place in being the only Polynesian kingdom to maintain its culture and government through the colonial period that brought down similar cultures in Hawaii and throughout the Pacific. Queen Salote adds to this uniqueness by being the ruling queen of Tonga in the first half of the Twentieth Century, an era dominated by male chauvenism. This story of her life and reign provides a wonderful view into the culture and history of this island kingdom. For papalangi (the Tongan word for people of Western society) this is not an easy book because there is a lot of Tongan names, geneology, and customs necessarily involved in the biography of their queen. Yet the very things that make it difficult also make it a rewarding book to read. What makes the book most enjoyable is the portrayal of this marvelous woman who ruled Tonga for almost 50 years. She ruled without use of force during a time of dissent from rival nobles and emerged one of the most revered leaders in Tongan history. She convinced her British advisors of her ability to rule and her island adversaries that their independence depended on her rule. I can recommend this book without reservation to anyone interested in women's studies, international biography, Polynesian history, or British colonial history.
- This book is greatly recommended for anyone who has some any remote interest in the personage of Queen Salote or who has any spark of interest in the region that she ruled.
The author, Elizabeth Wood- Ellem, takes an intricate look into the life of one of the world's last remaining monarchies. She further sheds more light on the decision making process that occurred during the late Queen's reign.
While the book is a comfortable read, it also gives the reader a glimpse into Tongan culture and the traditions that were so embellished by the Queen.
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Posted in Australia (Tuesday, September 7, 2010)
Written by Kate Grenville. By Canongate Books.
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3 comments about Searching for the Secret River.
- In this memoir, Kate Grenville provides some insights into both the drafting of her novel `The Secret River' and her search for her family history. Ms Grenville is a descendant of early settler Solomon Wiseman. She had grown up knowing the outline of his story: his arrival in Sydney as a convict in 1806, the establishment of his business on the Hawkesbury River (from which Wiseman's Ferry takes its name).
The first part of this book is Ms Grenville's personal quest for Wiseman through the records of the Society of Genealogists and the Public Records Office. Identifying the `right' late 18th century Solomon Wiseman is not easy and ultimately Ms Grenville supplements her search through the formal records with her own sense of Solomon Wiseman's presence at Three Cranes Wharf.
Ms Grenville also seeks to obtain a sense of the Aboriginal inhabitants of the Hawkesbury at the time they were dispossessed of their land by Wiseman. She does this through returning to the river, which she had first visited as a short-sighted child. Now, as an adult she is able to see and to sense the past more clearly. Some of Ms Grenville's most vivid writing is of the landscape, especially of the river itself. In many ways, it is this description of the landscape which joins the novel to this book more than the people and the history.
In the second part of the book, Ms Grenville describes the process of creating her novel: describing the struggle involved in blending fact, fiction and physical description to bring the characters and the period to life.
I enjoyed reading this book for the insights into the writing of `The Secret River'.
Jennifer Cameron-Smith
- Anybody who has read Kate Grenville's award winning The Secret River is bound to be curious about the parallels between Grenville's real ancestor, Solomon Wiseman, and the fictional William Thornhill, both convicts shipped off from London to Australia in the beginning of the nineteenth century. While starting out to write a biography of her great-great-great grandfather, what research did she embark on, what discoveries and mental processes led her in the end to move from a biography to a work of historical fiction? The author, honest, self-aware and self-critical, takes the reader on a fascinating journey into her mind, her feelings and analyses of people and places. Also, and of equal interest to those who have not (yet) read the novel, this "writer's memoir" is an enjoyable "how to" guide for any personal writing project. It contains a few "mantras about writing", such as "never start with a blank page", or "don't wait for time to write", etc. Grenville, who also teaches creative writing, walks the talk herself and the insights she shares with her readers make this a very personal and engaging story.
I use the term "story" deliberately as it reads much more like a story of discovery and less as a writer's guide or even a "memoir". Her exquisite style and rich language that evoke landscapes and city-scapes in such vivid colours and detail that you feel you are walking along with her. Her research into the real great-great-great grandfather was not straight forward, of course, as records were scarce, family stories were not factual and there were numerous Solomon W. and dozens of Wisemans living in London around the same time in the same part of town... How she narrows down her search is also a guide for anybody interested in their own family genealogy - just fascinating. One aspect that helped her later on in her writing (and the reader of the novel will recognize them): she picked up small mementoes, stood on the spot where she imagined her ancestor had been standing. As soon as she made the connection, she can feel him, get under his skin. Only then does the character develop his own persona and as author she has to accept that she follows and he controls.
Immense amount of research spanning several years resulted in filling one major gap in her knowledge or imagination after another. Recreating the language of working class people and fishermen as spoken in the late seventeen nineties was another challenge Grenville had to deal with: Solomon was not literate but later historical documents suggest that he learned to write, although in a stilted, ungrammatical sort of way. While the author made remarkable progress on the male side of her family, the female side, her great-great-great grandmother remained a mystery to her for the longest time. Few information snippets existed in the family archive and memory... so what to do? Her answer, after several false starts, is intriguing, and not only from the perspective of the novel's character development.
The most difficult part of her search and research, however, was to imagine how the real Solomon Wiseman reacted to and interacted with the Aborigines when he and his young family first arrived in Australia. In investigating what might have happened, Grenville realized that she herself lacked much information and knowledge about the life of the aboriginal peoples of her country. Her learning path in this field is deeply moving as she gently and subtly explores what happened at the time of early confrontation and what could have been Wiseman's role in these encounters. For her own life it was another voyage of discovery.
This "writing memoir" is such a beautifully and engagingly written book that it should be seen as an essential compendium for those who read THE SECRET RIVER. For others it is still a great read and probably a motivation to pick up the novel afterwards. [Friederike Knabe]
- This is an interesting book about the research that goes into writing an historical novel. My intention in reading it was to beef up a book club presentation on The Secret River (which it did). Grenville writes about the stylistic choices she made in writing The Secret River. She also shares the truth about the characters one meets in the novel. As a stand alone story, the book feels a bit forced, but as a sequel to her novel it is very worth reading.
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Bravest: How Some of Australia's Greatest War Heroes Won Their Medals
A Sort of Conscience: The Wakefields
Australian Television: A Genealogy of Great Moments
Passageways: The Story of a New Zealand Family
The Boyds: A Family Biography
Writing Family History Made Very Easy: A Beginner's Guide
The Tarasov Saga: From Russia Through China to Australia
Ulster Jacksons: From Cumbria to the Whitehouse, Shenandoah and Australia
Queen Salote of Tonga: The Story of an Era 1900-1965
Searching for the Secret River
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