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Biography |
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Alzheimer's:
A Love Story Ulman, Vivienne Scribe PB 9781921640001 $32.95 Vivienne
Ulman’s memoir is an often painfully personal, autobiographical account of a
daughter coming to terms with the death of her mother from Alzheimer’s
disease. The themes of family history, memory, love and loss are explored
through short, episodic chapters which move back and forth in time, creating
a collage-like family portrait that revolves around her parents’ love for
each other and their children. Central to the story is Vivienne’s father, who
selflessly dedicated his life to caring for his wife during her slow
disintegration from Alzheimer’s. Just as central is the way in which we deal
with grief, and how as individuals we create a system of coping when faced
with the challenges of losing a loved one. |
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The
Blaze of Obscurity: The TV Years James, Clive Picador PB 9780330511056 $35.00 Clive
James’s fifth memoir begins in 1982, with his departure from Fleet Street and
the world of print journalism to ‘the madly glamorous medium of television’.
He writes thoughtfully about the mechanics of this new world – how
television was made – including details like the editing of footage,
writing of scripts and business of interviewing. There are also encounters
with lions and elephants in Africa, observations and gossip on various
celebrities (he lunched with Roman Polanski and found it ‘hard to admire’
him) and reports on his ongoing Friday lunches with the likes of Martin and
Kingsley Amis, Christopher Hitchens and Julian Barnes. This seamless memoir
is James at his raconteur best: witty, incisive, dryly self-deprecating and
marvellously entertaining. An absolute pleasure. |
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The
Cello Suites: J. S. Bach, Pablo Casals & the Search for a Baroque Masterpiece SIBLIN, ERIC Allen & Unwin PB 9781742371597 $30.00 Subtitled
‘J. S. Bach, Pablo Casals and the search for a baroque masterpiece’, the
first book by Canadian journalist and filmmaker Eric Siblin pays homage to
Bach and his six suites for the cello. Having closed the chapter in his life
as a pop music critic, Siblin attended a recital of Bach’s suites in 2000.
The result was a new obsession, as he fell in love with the music and became
increasingly intrigued by the story behind the suites’ composition and their
later revival by Catalan cellist, Pablo Casals. Like the six suites, each of
the six chapters has six movements, moving from past to present, biography to
music history, Barcelona to Brussels as the author travels across the globe
in pursuit of a lost manuscript and the source of his passion. |
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Diaries Orwell, George Harvill/Secket HB 9781846553295 $59.95 George
Orwell was an inveterate keeper of diaries. Eleven of these are presented
here in one volume, providing a new insight into Orwell’s character and
understanding of his great works. Covering the period 1931–49, Diaries
follows Orwell from his early years as a writer up to his last literary notebook.
The hop-picking diary covers some of Orwell’s time spent down and out; and
the notes from his travels through industrial England, which formed the basis
of The Road to Wigan Pier, show the development of the gifted young novelist
and impassioned social commentator. His trademark acute power of observation
is evident in his diaries from Morocco, and the wartime diaries make
fascinating reading, from descriptions of events overseas to the daily
violence closer to home and his astute perspective on the politics of both. |
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Dreaming
of Dior: Every Dress Tells a Story Smith, Charlotte M Harper Collins PB 9780732290399 $35.00 When Blue
Mountains–based Charlotte Smith inherited a priceless collection of
vintage clothing from her American godmother, couture collector Doris
Darnell, she became the custodian of more than 3000 pieces dating from 1790
to 1995. In Dreaming of Dior, these special-occasion outfits are brought to
life in classic fashion illustrations by Grant Cowan. Along with the ultimate
dress-up box of jewelled cocktail gowns, micro minis, taffeta crinolines and
designer ensembles, Darnell also bequeathed detailed catalogue notes on the
collection to her goddaughter. Smith’s text and Cowan’s brightly coloured
sketches combine to capture a moment in time, shedding light on the outfits
and the women who wore them. |
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Finding
Frieda Kahlo Levine, Barbara Princeton Architectural HB 9781568988306 $95.00 Fifty-five
years have passed since the death of Frida Kahlo, and the legends and
mystique surrounding the iconic Mexican artist continue to grow. Adding fuel
to the fire, Finding Frida Kahlo reproduces a previously undiscovered cache
of letters, drawings, paintings, notebooks and ephemera that curator and
collector Barbara Levine found stored in five dusty suitcases in a Mexican
antique shop. Dealers and art experts alike have queried the authenticity of
this fascinating haul of artworks, erotica and knick-knacks, but a Q&A
with the antique-dealer custodians reveals how the collection came to be in
their possession and details the steps they have taken to prove its
provenance. |
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Grand
Obsessions: The Life & Works of Walter Burley Griffin & Marion Mahony
Griffin
McGregor, Alasdair Lantern HB 9781920989385 $369.95 Almost a century after the international design competition for the national capital, Walter Burley Griffin’s design – and its implementation – is still hotly debated. Who was this man and what was his vision? How did he come to Canberra, what happened once the Australian establishment tore him to shreds, and what was the role of his wife, helpmate, fellow architect and creative partner, Marion Mahony Griffin? In this definitive new biography, Alasdair McGregor delineates the role each played in the production of their greatest works – Canberra, Castlecrag, Newman College and the rest – and charts their lives, from their childhoods and meeting in Chicago in the employ of the larger than life Frank Lloyd Wright, to their battles in Canberra, Melbourne and Sydney, and their swansong in India. |
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I
Blame Duchamp: My Life's Adventure in Art Capon, Edmund Lantern HB 9781920989620 $49.95 Rather than
writing a conventional autobiography, the charismatic director of the Art
Gallery of New South Wales reveals insights into his passions, opinions and
life experience by reflecting on his long-time fascination with art and
artists. Capon touches on a diverse range of topics, including the
contemporary art world’s fascination with conceptual art. There are personal
encounters with artists including Henry Moore and Sidney Nolan, his top 10
museums, his love for football and Chinese art (not necessarily in that
order), and studies on a diverse range of artists from Bellini to Henson that
make compelling reading. More than 50 artworks are reproduced, and the book
itself is packaged as a clever homage to Duchamp’s readymade art. |
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Mozipedia:
Encyclopedia of Morrissey & the Smiths GODDARD, SIMON Ebury HB 9780091927097 $69.95 Pop icon
Morrissey is as revered as he is reviled by music fans and aficionados around
the globe. Music journalist and author Simon Goddard is widely accepted as
one of the foremost experts on the artist, and this new tome-like world
according to Morrissey and The Smiths is as close to the last word as you’ll
find on Mozza and Co. Although unauthorised and hindered by a continued
refusal from Morrissey to speak to Goddard, this obsessively researched work
would surely impress the great man himself. With entries covering everything
from the complete back catalogue of Morrissey/Smiths songs to his
vegetarianism and love of the Carry On movies, it’s a truly eccentric and
eclectic portrait of the boy with the thorn in his side. |
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My
Name is Charles Saatchi and I Am an Artoholic Saatchi, Charles Phaidon PB 9780714857473 $14.95 This witty,
well-designed and keenly priced book brings together the answers to almost
200 questions put to Charles Saatchi, founder of global advertising agency
Saatchi & Saatchi and probably the most influential art collector of our
time. Whether the questions are related to art or his personal life, Saatchi
answers them all with disarming and sometimes brutal frankness, creating an
entertaining and enlightening portrait of a famously publicityshy man and
offering a unique insight into today’s art world. We learn of his frappaccino
habit, his views on Damien Hirst’s plummeting career, what he thought about
the National Gallery of Australia’s action in cancelling the 2000 ‘Sensation’
exhibition, his reaction to the assertion that painting is dead and what it’s
like being married to a domestic goddess. |
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A Nest
of Occasionals MARTIN, TONY Picador PB 9780330425230 $30.00 Tony
Martin’s first book, Lolly Scramble (Pan Australia. PB. $24.95), revealed
that his mastery of the comedic anecdote translates as beautifully on the
page as it does on the radio and screen. A Nest of Occasionals delivers
another serving of hilarious memoir, in bite-size chapters that spin seemingly
ordinary experiences from childhood and beyond into touchingly funny
entertainment. He recalls being crowned ‘Poof of the Century’ after declaring
his hero as the guy who ‘did all the sound effects for Star Wars’; trying to
meet girls in a series of amateur drama productions; and having his braces
(which he got aged 17) repossessed by the government. A Nest of Occasionals
confirms that Tony Martin is infectiously likeable – and infectiously
readable, too. |
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Nothing
was the Same Redfield Jamison, Kay Scribe PB 9781921640087 $27.95 Moving,
instructive and more compulsively readable than any book about death has a
right to be, this memoir is both a meditation on the nature and experience of
grief and a tribute to the author’s late husband, who died of lung cancer.
Kay Redfield Jamison is a professor of psychiatry, author of four books on
brain chemistry, including a lauded memoir about her manic depression (An
Unquiet Mind. Picador. PB. $22.95) and a recipient of a Macarthur ‘genius
grant’. Her husband and partner of nearly 20 years, Richard Wyatt, was a
renowned scientist and expert on schizophrenia. This intelligent and
accessible book is reminiscent of Joan Didion’s The Year of Magical Thinking
(Harper Perennial. PB. $25) in celebrating a close marriage and mourning its
passing in an insightful and heartfelt fashion. |
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Outside
of a Dog: A Bibliomemoir Gekoski, Rick Peribo PB 9781863220248 $32.95 In this
saucy and scintillating memoir (or bibliomemoir – a term and genre he
has more or less invented), dealer in rare books and BBC broadcaster Rick
Gekoski takes us on a fascinating literary journey in which he reveals the
intricate relations between his reading and his life. Gekoski’s wide
knowledge of literature, psychology and philosophy is cheerfully enlivened by
his enthusiasm, humour and frankness. Tracing the role books have played in
his life, Rick selects 25 that are special to him and trains the same ironic
and analytic eye on these chosen few (and their authors) as he does on
himself. The result is unique – a sustained and witty work dedicated to
the proposition that reading is one of life’s great formative influences. |
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The
Riddle of Father Hackett NIALL, BRENDA National Library of Australia PB 9780642276858 $39.95 Brenda
Niall, who so magnificently captured an Australian arts dynasty in The Boyds
(MUP. PB. $45), has unearthed an important piece of Australian history while
digging through the archives of this exiled Irish Catholic. Forced out of
Ireland for his involvement with the Irish Nationalist movement, Father
Hackett soon found himself at the centre of Australian political life through
a friendship with the influential Archbishop of Melbourne, Daniel Mannix.
Hackett became known as a ‘meddling priest’ to politicians of the day for his
activism and convictions. As well as uncovering correspondence with B. A.
Santamaria and revolutionary Michael Collins, Niall also brings her own
reflections on a man who was a regular visitor to her childhood home. |
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Rifling
Through My Drawers Dickson-Wright, Clarissa Hodder PB 9780340977460 $35.00 The
surviving member of the Two Fat Ladies, Clarissa Dickson Wright could never
be accused of not telling it like it is. Rifling Through My Drawers is no
less forthright, honest and entertaining than her previous autobiographical
musings, Spilling the Beans (Hodder. PB. $25). Taking the form of a
month-by-month diary over the course of one year, Clarissa heads off on an
entertaining journey around the British countryside. Along the way she covers
all manner of rural events and traditions close to her heart, and includes
recipes for such idiosyncratic fare as venison Scotch eggs and Bath buns.
Never one to be politically correct, there are plenty of anecdotes told in
the author’s down-to-earth, jolly hockey sticks voice that will raise more
than a few eyebrows. |
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So
This is Life: Scenes from a Country Childhood Manne, Anne MUP HB 9780522855210 $35.00 Anne
Manne’s memoir depicting ‘scenes from a country childhood’ is told in a
series of vignettes, focusing on a particularly emotional time in her life.
Following the break-up of her parents’ marriage, Anne travelled with her
mother and sisters to rural Victoria to start a new life, leaving her father
and brother behind in Adelaide. Lucidly and keenly, she teases out the pain
and confusion of this traumatic yet vibrant time, when her love for rural
Australia and its people and animals was formed. In doing so, she scans the
literary landscape of writings on memory and loss, from Proust to Woolf,
Helen Garner to Clive James, identifying the colours, tastes, sounds and
smells that conjure up the past. Manne’s previous book was Motherhood (Allen
& Unwin. PB. $29.95). |
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Source:
Nature's Healing Role in Art and Writing Burke Janine Allen & Unwin HB 9781741758177 $55.00 Janine
Burke is renowned for her engrossing books exploring and explaining the lives
of artists, illuminating their work with her investigations into their
psyches. While writing The Heart Garden (Vintage. PB. $24.95), one of her
series of books on the Heide circle of artists, she was inspired to explore
the beloved landscapes and locations of other artists and writers, to gauge
the connection between art and place. Her investigations led her all over the
world, to locations such as the New Mexico desert of Georgia O’Keefe, Jackson
Pollock’s Long Island, Hemingway’s Key West and the Sussex of Virginia Woolf
and Vanessa Bell. The result is a deeply thought, passionately explorative look
at creativity through the ‘beautiful, memorable’ locations that inspired
major works by these creators. |
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HIGHLIGHT Blue
Plateau: A Landscape Memoir Tredinnick, Mark UQP PB 9780702237102 $26.95 Poet Mark
Tredinnick has written a lyrical natural history of the Blue Mountains and a
memoir of his attempt to belong there. |
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HIGHLIGHT Chanel Roux, Charles Edmonde Quercus PB 9781906694241 $29.95 The book
that inspired the film starring Audrey Tautou. A fascinating look at the life
and world of fashion’s ultimate icon. |
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HIGHLIGHT City
Boy: My Life in New York During the 1960s & 1970s White, Edmund Bloomsbury PB 9781408804438 $35.00 A memoir of
the social and sexual lives of New York City’s cultural and intellectual
in-crowd in the tumultuous 1960s and ’70s. NB: December release. |
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HIGHLIGHT Creative
Lives: Personal papers of Australian writers & artists Hanley, Penelope NLA PB 9780642276568 $39.95 Hanley
presents papers of 22 well-known Australian literary and artistic figures,
giving an insight into their creative lives. |
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HIGHLIGHT Desperate
Romantics: The Private Lives of the Pre-Raphaelites Moyle, Franny Hachette PB 9781848540507 $28.00 The
Pre-Raphaelites’ bohemian lifestyles and intertwined love affairs
broke19th-century class barriers and bent the rules governing the roles of
the sexes |
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HIGHLIGHT Ever,
Dirk: The Bogarde Letters Bogarde, Dirk Phoenix PB 9780753825891 $35.00 A
collection of actor Dirk Bogarde’s frank, gossipy, funny and often malicious
letters. |
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SPECIAL
PRICE HIGHLIGHT Florence
Broadhurst O'Neill, Helen Hardie Grant HB 9781740662949 $29.95
Originally $59.95 From
vaudeville performer to London couturier and Australian landscape painter,
the many lives of Florence Broadhurst were as varied and extravagant as the
flamboyant wallpaper patterns that eventually gave her fame. Her graphic
swirls, peacocks and flowers are cropping up in hotels and restaurants around
the world, as well as on designer couture and accessories. Sporting a bold
silver and black cover, this new edition of the bestselling 2006 biography is
lavishly illustrated with reproductions of her famous designs. The book
unravels Broadhurst’s compelling life story, from her roots in rural
Queensland and the establishment of her wallpaper business in 1960s Sydney to
her vicious murder in 1977, a crime which remains unsolved. A fascinating
biography and gorgeous design resource in one. |
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HIGHLIGHT For
Richer, For Poorer: A Love Affair with Poker Coren, Victoria Text PB 9781921520792 $34.95 The winner
of the 2006 European Poker Championship describes her 20-year-long obsession
with the game. |
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HIGHLIGHT The
Hacienda: How Not to Run a Club Hook, Peter Simon & Schuster HB 9781847371355 $50.00 The
co-founder of Joy Division and New Order has written an entertaining memoir
about the Hacienda club in Manchester. |
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HIGHLIGHT Halfway
to Hollywood: Diaries 1980 to 1988 Palin, Michael Hachette HB 9780297844402 $55.00 The second
volume of the affable Python’s diaries covers events including the making of
A Fish Called Wanda and the first of his celebrated journeys for the BBC. |
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HIGHLIGHT The
Hemingses of Monticello: An American Family GORDON REED, ANNETTE Wiley PB 9780393337761 $32.95 The story
of the Hemingses, a slave family with close blood ties to President Thomas
Jefferson. Winner of the 2009 Pulitzer Prize for History. |
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HIGHLIGHT Killing
the Black Dog Murray, Les Black Inc PB 9781863954471 $24.95 The great
Australian poet gives a courageous account of his struggle with depression,
accompanied by especially selected poems. |
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HIGHLIGHT The
King of Vodka: The Story of Pyotr Smirnov & the Upheaval of an Empire Himelstein, Linda Harper PB 9780061829871 $33.00 Traces the
life of vodka pioneer Pyotr Smirnov, recounting the personal lives of the
Smirnov family against the backdrop of events leading up to the Russian
Revolution. |
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HIGHLIGHT Letters
Home: To Mother From Gallipoli & Beyond Anthony, Doug & Margot Allen & Unwin HB 9781742371375 $35.00 The war
experiences of a very young man – and the relationship between a son
and his mother – during the horrors of Gallipoli and its aftermath. |
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HIGHLIGHT A Life
Like Other People's Bennett, Alan Faber HB 9780571248124 $27.00 This family
memoir by the author of the muchloved Untold Stories (Faber. PB. $27.95) is
both heartrending and at times irresistibly funny. |
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HIGHLIGHT Living
Large: The World of Harold Mitchell Mitchell, Harold MUP HB 9780522856576 $50.00 The story
of media-buyer Harold Mitchell’s remarkable personal journey from son of a
saw miller to owner of a $100 million business. |
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SPECIAL
PRICE HIGHLIGHT The
Lost Mother: A Story of Art & Love Summers, Ann MUP PB 9780522856354 $26.95
Originally $35.00 When
feminist writer and commentator Anne Summers inherited a childhood portrait
of her late mother, her curiosity about how the portrait came to be painted
took her on an unexpected journey of detection into the lives of the painter,
Constance Stokes, and her patron, Lydia Mortill. It would also force Summers
to confront the true nature of her often-troubled relationship with her
mother. With accompanying black-and-white and colour illustrations to help
tell the story, this enthralling book is at once a memoir, art history and detective
story as the lives of the women unfold and the mystery of a lost second
painting of Summers’ mother emerges. |
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HIGHLIGHT Lowside
of the Road: A Life of Tom Waits Hoskyns, Barney Faber PB 9780571245031 $35.00 Acclaimed
music critic and historian Hoskyns has written the definitive biography of
enigmatic, gravel-voiced musician, Tom Waits. |
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HIGHLIGHT Manhood
for Amateurs Chabon, Michael Harper Collins PB 9780007257874 $33.00 Chabon
presents his autobiography and vision of life in the form of a series of
insightful and provocative essays. |
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HIGHLIGHT Piano
Lessons Goldsworthy, Anna Black Inc PB 9781863954433 $27.95 Goldsworthy
recalls her first steps towards a life in music, from childhood piano lessons
to international success as a concert pianist. |
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HIGHLIGHT Raising
My Voice Malalai, Joyce Macmillan PB 9781405039130 $35.00 The story
of Afghani women’s rights activist and politician Malalai Joya, whose
outspoken criticism of war lords in her country has led to several
assassination attempts on her life. |
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HIGHLIGHT Rocky
and Gawenda Gawanda, Michael MUP PB 9780522856972 $25.00 Michael
Gawenda is one of Australia’s best-known journalists and writers. Rocky is
his small furry dog of indeterminate breeding. This is their story. |
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HIGHLIGHT The
Secret Lives of Somerset Maugham Hastings, Selina John Murray HB 9780719565540 $70.00 Documents
the writer’s concealment of his homosexuality, disastrous marriage, escape to
the Far East and WWII work with British Intelligence. |
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HIGHLIGHT The
Snowball: Warren Buffett & the Business of Life Schroeder, Alice Allen & Unwin PB 9781408805022 $35.00 A
personally revealing and complete biography of ‘The Oracle of Omaha’,
legendary businessman Warren Buffet. |
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SPECIAL
PRICE HIGHLIGHT Things
I've Been Silent About Azar, Nafisi Heinemann PB 9780434014040 $14.95
Originally $32.95 Iranian
author Azar Nafisi garnered readers around the world with her bestselling
memoir Reading Lolita in Tehran (Hachette. PB. $25). In her new, more
personally revealing, memoir she takes us back to her childhood in Iran to
chronicle her troubled relationship with her complex mother and womanising
father. Now that her parents are dead, she looks back over their turbulent
lives and considers the gift of storytelling they gave her despite their
estrangement, and the foibles and failings that inspired her to follow a
different path in life. Personal photographs sprinkled throughout add
poignancy to this moving account of family life in a time and place of
political and social upheaval. |
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SPECIAL
PRICE HIGHLIGHT True
Compass Kennedy, Ted Little Brown HB 9781408702284 $44.95
Originally $50.00 Edward
Kennedy didn’t live to see his autobiography in print, dying at Hyannis Port
on 25 August 2009 less than two weeks before publication. His
much-anticipated memoir is the definitive firsthand account of America’s
first family, drawing on 50 years of diaries and notes. Kennedy paints a
picture of family life with his parents and eight older siblings, and
recounts their profound influence on his life and 46 years as a progressive
liberal senator. For the first time, he reveals the years of heartbreak he
suffered following the deaths of his brothers. With equal candour he tells of
his later career in the Senate, including his endorsement of Barack Obama,
and retraces the events that occurred at Chappaquiddick in July 1969, which
closed the door on his own place in the presidential race. |
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HIGHLIGHT Why
You Are Australian: A Letter to My Children Gemmell, Nikki Harper Collins PB 9780732289591 $30.00 In this
honest, provocative and uplifting treatise, expatriate Nikki Gemmell writes
about what it means to be Australian right now. |
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HIGHLIGHT You
Better Not Cry Burroughs, Augusten Hachette PB 9780733621437 $30.00 In this
caustically funny, nostalgic, poignant and moving book, Burroughs (Running
with Scissors. Hachette. PB. $25) recounts Christmases past and present. |
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HIGHLIGHT Zeitoun Eggers, Dave Hamish Hamilton PB 9780241144855 $32.95 An account
of Hurricane Katrina through the eyes of long-time New Orleans residents
Abdulrahman and Kathy Zeitoun. |