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  • - Adventures in Japan and Hong Kong
    av Gail Holloway
    196 - 250,-

  • av Nina Paine
    256 - 260,-

  • - Escape from San Lazaro
    av Suzanne Westgate
    246,-

  • av Adrian Callaghan
    276 - 296,-

  • - The Beyonders
    av David A Petersen
    356,-

    MINERVA - The Roman Goddess of wisdom and the sciences as well as war.THE MINERVA PROJECT - A development of the multi-national corporation ScienceStart.SCIENCESTART - Colin Bourke’s company whose main aim is to develop financially viable scientific achievements.Six of the finest scientific minds in the western world are working on a venture to lay the foundations to control the last bastion of our natural world- time. This unique experiment becomes a disaster when the Minerva Project suffers a catastrophic malfunction causing five members of the team to find themselves no longer on Earth. The sixth member of the team remains on his home world to ponder his part in this devastating failure.Along with the five members of the project’s initial research team, numerous other people from across Earth are summarily torn from their lives and deposited without rhyme or reason on this foreign world. These unfortunates include the last surviving members of a doomed British military expedition on the mountain of Isandhlwana in Africa, an Iroquois helicopter crew from an ill-fated mission during the Vietnam War, a hunted man from the streets of a city in Ireland, an SS officer on the run from justice in the aftermath of World War Two, a group of soldiers on opposite sides of the American Civil War and a suburban family innocently on holidays. Many other people are also transferred to the world of Perencore where they face a constant battle for survival in a harsh existence against seemingly overwhelming odds. Earth and Perencore are not the only worlds involved in this terrible violation of the natural order. The remnants of a mighty tribe of a people known as the Appor arrive in this new setting from their own planet. They too must face a constant fight to survive and find themselves battling a dreaded enemy from a time long past.These different characters individually, or as a collective begin an exploration of this extraordinary setting to seek answers to many questions about their current state of existence. More importantly they desperately search this new planet for a means of returning to their former lives on their home worlds. Some of the people involved in this dilemma find their lives uncomplicated enough to manage in this new society while others are forced to deal with a brutal existence where each and every day may bring about a sudden death at the hands of Perencore’s inhabitants. Their only means of defence on this world is their superior know-how, intellect and advanced technology.The main threat to the lives of this world’s new arrivals come in the form of a wide ranging group of merciless bandits called the Anhil. Another threat to the lives of the new inhabitants soon referred to by the local people as ‘Beyonders’ is the fact a long simmering feud is slowly escalating into a full-scale war between two mighty powers. The benign Hamaforth Kingdoms under the command of King Entell Thellon the Third have long been under threat of invasion by those persons overseeing the enemy state, The Azzil Territories whose overlord, Ruler Jom Azzer has vowed to take control of the entire Kingdoms at all costs. By the end of this volume some of the new arrivals to this planet have, with the kind assistance of the more benevolent members of the local community assimilated themselves into this rudimentary and antiquated society. Others find their fight for survival an endless nightmare and one character advances to the upper echelon of the nobility. In these, their new lives they unknowingly become involved in the machinations of ongoing hostilities between the two forces which include numerous assassination plots and an attempt to overthrow the Hamaforth Kingdoms’ monarchy by a bloody coup.

  • - Book One of the Stones Series
    av G J Busiko
    196 - 250,-

  • av V Parker Kennedy
    280 - 310,-

  • - Book Three of the Stones Series
    av G J Busiko
    246 - 266,-

  • - The Man with the Golden Voice
    av Garrick Jones
    270 - 380,-

  • av Lesley J Mooney
    276 - 296,-

  • - Adventures in the Red Centre
    av Hannah Mowen
    146,-

    After his first visit to Australia, Ozzy can't wait to travel there again. Luckily, Santa agrees to a second visit.This time, Ozzy lands in the desert - the Red Centre - and finds out just how hot and dry the desert can be. After trying to swim in the mirage of an oasis, Ozzy is lucky to meet a young Aboriginal boy, Warra, and his animal friends. They show him around and explain a lot about their culture and life in the desert. As always, Ozzy is full of questions!But life is tough for Warra and his friends as the Red Centre is drying out - there's just not enough water left for everyone and they're not sure what to do, until Ozzy's magic camera reveals a secret map …Join Ozzy and his new friends as they trek off to Kakadu in search of the Rainbow Serpent.

  • - The Secret of Contentment
    av Robyn L Bradley
    476 - 516,-

  • - Chilling Tales of the Blue Mountains
    av Craig Stanton
    256 - 270,-

  • av Russell Schneider
    290 - 316,-

  • - Maximising Happiness and Balance
    av Andy Marshall
    246 - 270,-

  • - A Clyde Smith Mystery
    av Garrick Jones
    286 - 306,-

  • av Natasha Simon
    186 - 200,-

  • - Communicate and present with confidence
    av Dale Rees-Bevan
    170 - 186,-

  • - A Journey of Survival and Resilience
    av Glen Fisher
    366 - 396,-

  • - The pioneering farmer of the Macleay River, his ancestors and his descendants. 1678 to 1978
    av Rod Julian
    280,-

    John Julian is a historical biography of an early pioneering farmer, John Julian, who married a young Elizabeth Keast in 1843. Soon after the wedding the couple left the green fields of Cornwall they knew so well to start a new life on the other side of the world - in Australia. John was twenty six years old, and Elizabeth only twenty three. At first they travelled to Sydney, and found work on a farm. A year later they sailed up the coast with a baby in Elizabeth's arms to the Macleay River. In the late 1840s the Macleay River was a dangerous, remote outpost where contracted farm workers lived and worked alongside convicts, and all survived on meagre rations given out by the squatter. Survival depended on being as self-sufficient as possible.The record starts with details on several generations of ancestors back in Cornwall, then the impressive life of John and Elizabeth Julian, including the many trials and disasters of life at the time.Following on are biographies of several generations of descendants. In one, that of John's son Joseph Julian, we discover how Joseph spent much of his life improving and beautifying the town of South West Rocks, and how he became a respected figure locally.The appendix includes military records of all the Julian family members from the Kempsey district who enlisted in the military during World War I and World War II, some of whom suffered terribly. All veterans were descendants of John and Elizabeth Julian.Every chapter has a detailed reference listing.In general the events portrayed give a deeper understanding of life in Australia, and especially the north coast of New South Wales, during the 1800s. This was a period of rapid development, when the majority of the thick coastal rainforest was progressively cleared for intensive farming, using only saws, picks and axes.The stories told also make it obvious that 'socially acceptable behaviour' in the 1800s was very strict, rigid, and clearly defined. In comparison, society today is very flexible, tolerant and forgiving.

  • - An Australian animal fantasy
    av Chris Fitzgerald
    170 - 190,-

  • - 1910 - 1912
    av Henrietta McManamey
    306,-

    This seems a good day to begin a diary.Thus begins, on Wednesday 27th April 1910, this 74-page account of the life of Henrietta Petrea McManamey, at her home in Woodford, NSW. Ettie, the 42-year-old wife of Woodford Academy headmaster John McManamey, was inspired to begin her journal not through a creative urge to have her words recorded for posterity but ‘As an aid to memory …,’ because she had mislaid an undershirt. This small exercise book contains an all-too-brief glimpse of Ettie that reveals an intelligent, acutely observant and engaging personality, freely expressing her most personal feelings and opinions in the privacy of its pages, before her death in 1913.The few years covered (1910 to 1912) were eventful, both locally and nationally. The Edwardian era was brief and King Edward VII’s death in 1910 marked the end of a decade of national prosperity and peace, that included development of a Federated nation, the granting of suffrage to white Australian women, increasing political awareness and the creation of a worker’s party, all in the calm before the storm of world war. Ettie’s writing discloses a detailed and personal account of pre-war Australian society: the death and mourning of the King; the fascination with Halley’s Comet; the rise of the Labor Party as a viable political force; the domestic needs of Academy life and the everyday observations of life, politics and people in New South Wales and the small Blue Mountains town of Woodford.Henrietta Petrea Holm McManamey was born in Bathurst in 1871 to Danish seaman Frederic Wilhelm Nielsen and Elizabeth Rae, daughter of A. B. Rae, photographer, bookseller and founder of the Western Independent newspaper. Frederick Nielsen anglicised his surname to Nelson and changed his occupation to ‘Photographic Artist’, working from 1868 to 1871 in a small studio in William Street, Bathurst. Although her father died when she was only four, Ettie writes fondly of the few memories she has of him and the stories she had been told of his courage in the 1870s when he braved the flooded Macquarie River to bring across the mail with Cobb and Co. pioneer, Jim Rutherford. She muses over the common heritage she shared with Queen Alexander, the Danish widow of King Edward VII, and expresses her pride at the one thousand Danish men sent to the funeral of the King, wondering if any of them could be related to her.

  • av Wendy Laing
    170 - 190,-

  • - A Memoir
    av Dr Jodie Fleming
    276 - 296,-

  • - For authors, editors and virtual assistants
    av Jennifer Mosher
    250 - 276,-

  • - Tales of War, Aussie Mateship and more
    av Garrick Jones
    200 - 256,-

  • av Peter J Hinds
    290,-

    2018 revised edition, with additional materialOn 19 March 1818, a young man called John Champley was committed to the House of Correction in Beverley, Yorkshire, England, for two years’ hard labour. He had been convicted of being a party to the theft of eighty pounds of butt leather in Pocklington on 13 December 1817.Four months later, after an attempted escape from the House of Correction, he was sentenced to transportation to one of His Majesty’s ‘Plantations or Colonies abroad’.Champley arrived in the penal colony of Sydney Cove on Thursday 7 October 1819 and was assigned to a shoemaker at Parramatta. After receiving his freedom in May 1826, Champley left Parramatta – with the shoemaker’s wife.Early in 1829, Champley and his family left Sydney to live at Bong Bong. In February 1830, following a robbery at the nearby Oldbury estate, Champley and his two alleged accomplices, John Yates and Joseph Shelvey, were sentenced to death at Campbelltown. They were saved from the gallows upon appeal by their barrister and their death penalties commuted to ‘life and hard labour in irons’. Champley and Shelvey were sent to Norfolk Island, and Yates to Moreton Bay.About a year later, two captured bushrangers from Jack Donohoe’s gang made confessions concerning the robbery and Champley, Shelvey and Yates were brought home and pardoned. However, the trial and incarceration had by now reduced their lives from one of hope to one of despair.~~~Many Australians now take great pride in tracing their convict heritage, but this has not always been the case. Historically governments destroyed convict records and families kept their offspring in the dark about their convict ancestry which has made it difficult to establish the true stories of these convicts.The backdrop to this story is the slavery of the convict system in New South Wales with the terror of the penal settlements of Norfolk Island and Moreton Bay.Under this evil system excessive floggings were handed out by the magistrates. The floggings and starvation drove many convicts to abscond and take to the bush to become bushrangers. Even when the convicts were emancipated they were still treated as second class citizens.The Campbelltown Convicts serves to record as many facts and details as possible of one story from this tragic period in our country’s history. It is a timely reminder that compassion and authority do not always go hand in hand.

  • - A N'Arth Chronicle
    av Val Clark
    256 - 276,-

  • - A Short and Practical Guide to Maintaining a Happy and Contented Life
    av Jen Matthews
    190 - 236,-

  • av Rosa Fedele
    330 - 420,-

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