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The Age of Wonder: How the
Romantic Generation Discovered the Beauty & Terror of Science Holmes, Richard Harper Collins PB 9780007149537 $35.00 In The Age
of Wonder, acclaimed biographer Richard Holmes looks at the early scientific
movement in Britain at a time when the distinction between the arts and
sciences had yet to be established, and when religious faith and scientific
endeavour worked hand in hand in pursuit of answers to life’s more ineffable
questions. Holmes shows how, as 18th-century Britain teetered on the cusp of
modernity, a series of remarkable friendships between astronomers William and
Caroline Herschel, the chemists Humphry Davy and Michael Faraday and their
contemporaries came to define an age, nurturing ideas that challenged
assumptions about identity, morality and religious belief. |
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The American Civil War Keegan, John Hutchinson HB 9780091794835 $69.95 This
magisterial history of the first modern war is on the scale of Keegan’s
classic A History of Warfare. In a sweeping, unputdownable narrative he
highlights the geography, leadership and strategic logic at the heart of the
conflict. Keegan describes his challenge with this book as being ‘… to relate
the landmarks of the war to its events, chronology, strategy and logic…The
Civil War is certainly a story of the struggle of man against man; it is
equally a story of the struggle of man against geography, in which those who
had a feel for the country eventually succeeded because they knew how to work
with the landscape instead of ignoring or defying it.’ |
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The Atlas of Legendary
Lands McLeod, Judyth A. Pier 9 HB 9781741961416 $65.00 In equal
parts an erudite, entertaining read and richly illustrated picture book, The
Atlas of Legendary Lands presents ‘a history of the world as it never was,
but as map makers once envisioned it’. Celebrating cartography’s bizarre
inaccuracies before exploration revealed the true nature of our planet, there
are depictions of sea monsters, treasure islands, oceanic black holes and
other extraordinary aspects of our world imagined by early mapmakers. McLeod
discusses historical maps of the world and mapped ideas of paradise,
including Thomas More’s Utopia, fabled kingdoms such as Camelot and lost
continents like Atlantis. She also reveals the geographical misconceptions
that cast California and Florida as islands and led Columbus to believe his
landing on Cuba placed him in China. |
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Commando to Colditz: Micky
Burn's Journey to the Far Side of Tears - The Raid on St Nazaire STANLEY, PETER Murdoch PB 9781741963847 $34.95 Books
written by military historians usually concentrate on the battles, strategies
and actions of war. Here, the focus is on the emotional experience and
consequences of war, both for the men who fight and their families at home.
In 1942, Micky Burn led his commando troop of 28 men on one of the most
daring raids of WWII, the assault on St Nazair. Only seven men came home; the
rest were killed or captured, held in the notorious Colditz prison. The book
grew out of a cache of letters Micky had asked his parents to write to the
families of his men if they didn’t return – resulting in this
extraordinary archive. This is a moving and important book about the
consequences and costs of war. |
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Conquest: The English
Kingdom of France Barker, Juliet Little Brown PB 9781408702468 $35.00 This
well-paced history by the best-selling author of Agincourt takes an in-depth
look at a fascinating yet neglected slice of French and English history: the
final 30 years of the Hundred Years’ War. From 1417 (two years after
Agincourt), there existed an English kingdom of France. At its height, this
creation of Henry V extended from the Normandy coast to the Loire and
Burgundy. Barker unwinds the tangled web of power struggles, alliances,
conspiracies, murders, battles and sieges that led to the crowning and
ultimate undoing of Henry’s son, Henry VI. The narrative includes a
chronology of key events, noting the role of Joan of Arc, who died six months
before Henry VI’s coronation. |
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The Good Soldiers Finkel, David Scribe PB 9781921640063 $35.00 In 2007
Washington Post editor and Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist David
Finkel travelled to Iraq with the soldiers of the 2-16 battalion and their
commander, Colonel Ralph Kauzlarich (who would become known by his soldiers
as ‘Lost Cause’). From their deployment from Fort Riley, Kansas, as part of
George W. Bush’s ‘surge’ into Baghdad, to their return from the dust and
death of Iraq in April 2008, Finkel pulls no punches in delivering his grim
firsthand report from the front lines. Combining the unflinching facts of
reportage and the compelling rhythm of a well-told narrative, The Good
Soldiers brings the personalities and experiences of the soldiers to life on
the page as he chronicles the battles, near misses and fatalities that
occurred during their tour of duty in Iraq. |
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How to Write History that
People Want to Read Curthoys, Ann & McGrath, Ann UNSW PB 9781742230863 $34.95 This
practical book, drawn from decades of experience, is an indispensable guide
to writing history. Aimed at all kinds of people who write history –
academic historians, public historians, professional historians, family
historians and students of all levels – the book includes a wide range
of examples from many genres and styles. It advises writers on how much
research is necessary, how to manage notes and files, when you should start
writing, whether to use the first person and whether to structure your work
chronologically or thematically. It also offers tips on how to write a
compelling narrative, discusses dialogue and how much to include, and gives
guidance on referencing. |
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Mirrors: A
History of the World Refracted GALEANO, EDUARDO Portobello PB 9781846272479 $35.00 History has
never been so enthralling, surprising and disturbingly enchanting as it is
here, in this provocative collection of 600 vignettes that tell a
refreshingly different version of world history. Eduardo Galeano, long
revered in Latin America, shot to worldwide prominence earlier this year when
Venezuelan leader Hugo Chavez publicly presented Barack Obama with a copy of
Galeano’s classic history, Open Veins of Latin America (see p17). History is
traditionally written by the victors, but Galeano writes primarily from the
point of view of the defeated, oppressed and betrayed. This is history as
storytelling, written with the lyricism and charm of a poet, the caustic wit
of a Jon Stewart or Michael Moore, and the encyclopaedic knowledge and sheer
passion of Robert Fisk. Brilliant. |
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The New York Times: The
Complete Front Pages 1851 - 2009 KELLER, BILL Black Dog HB 9781579128258 $99.95 This
impressive book-and-DVD ROM set provides access to world history as reported
in one of its most influential and respected newspapers. More than 300 of the
most significant NYT front pages have been carefully selected and beautifully
reproduced in the book, and news summaries throughout highlight the most
significant events of each era and put the front pages into a historical
context. There are also 17 insightful essays by prominent Times writers on
pivotal moments, including ‘The End of Slavery’ by William Safire, ‘Women’s
Suffrage’ by Gail Collins and ‘The Age of Television’ by Frank Rich. The
three DVD ROMs include each of the 54,266 front pages printed by the Times
over the past 157 years and are completely searchable. |
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A Swindler's Progress:
Nobles & Convicts in the Age of Liberty Mckenzie, Kirsten UNSW PB 9781742231105 $34.95 Seemingly
minor episodes in history can, in retrospect, reveal much about the societies
in which they took place. In May 1835, a Sydney man was charged with
impersonating the long-vanished Edward, Viscount Lascelles, heir to one of
Britain’s greatest fortunes. He was accused of being a serial trickster and
conman, and his case of questioned identity drew much interest in a fledgling
Australian society racked with divisions between the free and ex-convict
classes. Meanwhile, the Lascelles family, made rich on the spoils of the West
Indies, personified a similar divide in Britain. This compelling narrative,
played out by a fascinating cast of characters, spans two continents –
and two societies in transition. |
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SPECIAL PRICE - HIGHLIGHT Cast Away: Lost and Found
in History CUMMINS, JOSEPH Pier 9 PB 9781741961386 $29.95 Originally $45.00 The titles
in Pier 9’s ‘Lost and Found in History’ series are beautifully produced,
boasting eye-catching design, copious fullcolour illustrations and engaging,
detailed storytelling. Cast Away tells 24 true stories of shipwreck, piracy
and mutiny on the high seas, including Alexander Selkirk (the real-life model
for Robinson Crusoe). First Encounters describes the details and experience
of those moments when two cultures encounter each other for the first time
– and the far-reaching, often tragic consequences. Lost Explorers tells
80 stories of explorers whose risks did not pay off, resulting in their
deaths or disappearances in far-flung lands. Ghost Colonies brings to light
the fascinating but rarely told stories of history’s lost colonies. |
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HIGHLIGHT D-Day: The Battle for
Normandy Beevor, Antony Viking HB 9780670887033 $59.95 Another
gripping military history by Beevor. This time he gives a vivid and
meticulously researched account of the Battle of Normandy. |
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HIGHLIGHT Finest Years: Churchill As
Warlord 1940-45 Hastings, Max Harper Collins PB 9780007337743 $35.00 A
wonderfully vivid image of Churchill through the eyes of British, American
and Russian soldiers, civilians and newspapers. |
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SPECIAL PRICE - HIGHLIGHT First Encounters: Lost and
Found in History Cummins, Joseph Pier 9 PB 9781741961430 $29.95 Originally $45.00 The titles
in Pier 9’s ‘Lost and Found in History’ series are beautifully produced,
boasting eye-catching design, copious fullcolour illustrations and engaging,
detailed storytelling. Cast Away tells 24 true stories of shipwreck, piracy
and mutiny on the high seas, including Alexander Selkirk (the real-life model
for Robinson Crusoe). First Encounters describes the details and experience
of those moments when two cultures encounter each other for the first time
– and the far-reaching, often tragic consequences. Lost Explorers tells
80 stories of explorers whose risks did not pay off, resulting in their
deaths or disappearances in far-flung lands. Ghost Colonies brings to light
the fascinating but rarely told stories of history’s lost colonies. |
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SPECIAL PRICE - HIGHLIGHT The Forsaken: From the
Great Depression to the Gulags - Hope & Betrayal in Stalin's Russia Abacus PB 9780349117539 $15.95 Originally $35.00 During the
economic hardship of the Great Depression, boatloads of Americans left the US
for the USSR, hoping to swap the unemployment and poverty of capitalism for
the Five Year Plan of communism. Betrayal and tragedy awaited these forgotten
immigrants to Stalin’s Russia, leading to executions and exile in labour
camps as the years of terror proceeded. Tzouliadis highlights the failure of
the American administration to provide assistance to its former citizens, and
notes the political and economic links between the two countries despite US
knowledge of the source of Russia’s forced labour. This disturbing, grim and
very human history draws upon the memoirs of two of the very few survivors,
and was awarded the 2009 Longman-History Today Book of the Year. |
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SPECIAL PRICE - HIGHLIGHT Ghost Colonies: Lost and
Found in History WRIGHT, ED Pier 9 PB 9781741964684 $29.95 Originally $45.00 The titles
in Pier 9’s ‘Lost and Found in History’ series are beautifully produced,
boasting eye-catching design, copious fullcolour illustrations and engaging,
detailed storytelling. Cast Away tells 24 true stories of shipwreck, piracy
and mutiny on the high seas, including Alexander Selkirk (the real-life model
for Robinson Crusoe). First Encounters describes the details and experience
of those moments when two cultures encounter each other for the first time
– and the far-reaching, often tragic consequences. Lost Explorers tells
80 stories of explorers whose risks did not pay off, resulting in their
deaths or disappearances in far-flung lands. Ghost Colonies brings to light
the fascinating but rarely told stories of history’s lost colonies. |
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HIGHLIGHT The Grand Inquisitor's
Manual: A History of Terror in the Name of God Kirsch, Jonathan Harper Collins PB 9780061732768 $35.00 Kirsch
presents a sweeping history of the Spanish Inquisition and the ways in which
it has served as the chief model for torture in the West to this day. |
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HIGHLIGHT The Great Cities in History Norwich, John Julius (ed) Thames & Hudson HB 9780500251546 $69.95 A portrait
of world civilisation told through the stories of 70 of the world’s greatest
cities. |
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HIGHLIGHT In Our Time Bragg, Melvyn Hachette PB 9780340980538 $35.00 A selection
of episodes reflecting the diversity of the BBC’s In Our Time radio
programmes about the history of ideas. |
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HIGHLIGHT The Irregulars: Roald Dahl
and the British Spy Ring in Wartime Washington Conant, Jennet Simon & Schuster PB 9780743294584 $29.95 The full
story of how author Roald Dahl became involved in a massive, secret campaign
of propaganda to weaken isolationist sentiment in America in 1940. |
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SPECIAL PRICE - HIGHLIGHT Lost Explorers: Lost and
Found in History WRIGHT, ED Pier 9 PB 9781741961393 $29.95 Originally $45.00 The titles
in Pier 9’s ‘Lost and Found in History’ series are beautifully produced,
boasting eye-catching design, copious fullcolour illustrations and engaging,
detailed storytelling. Cast Away tells 24 true stories of shipwreck, piracy
and mutiny on the high seas, including Alexander Selkirk (the real-life model
for Robinson Crusoe). First Encounters describes the details and experience
of those moments when two cultures encounter each other for the first time
– and the far-reaching, often tragic consequences. Lost Explorers tells
80 stories of explorers whose risks did not pay off, resulting in their
deaths or disappearances in far-flung lands. Ghost Colonies brings to light
the fascinating but rarely told stories of history’s lost colonies. |
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SPECIAL PRICE - HIGHLIGHT Millenium Holland, Tom Little Brown PB 9781408700860 $15.95 Originally $35.00 In this
accessible jaunt through the first millennium to the tumultuous 11th century,
historian Tom Holland, award-winning author of Rubicon and Persian Fire,
sheds light on the so-called Dark Ages and the era of change that set the
Western world on a trajectory towards modernity that continues to this day.
Vikings, knights, crusaders and bloody campaigns fill the pages of this
action-packed history, which begins with the conversion of Constantine in 312
and ends with the crusaders’ capture of Jerusalem in 1099. Holland identifies
Pope Gregory VII as godfather to the future, setting in place the division of
power between Church and state that would transform a group of scattered
kingdoms into the powerful entity that would become Western Europe. |
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HIGHLIGHT Open Veins of Latin
America: Five Centuries of Pillage of a Continent GALEANO, EDUARDO Scribe PB 9781921640049 $35.00 Has set a
new standard for historical scholarship of Latin America since its US debut
25 years ago. With a new introduction by Isabel Allende. |
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HIGHLIGHT Pompeii: The Life of a
Roman Town Beard, Mary Profile PB 9781861975966 $25.00 Beard uses
the relics buried by the famous eruption in AD79 to bring everyday Roman
culture alive. Winner of the 2008 Wolfson Prize for History. |
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SPECIAL PRICE - HIGHLIGHT Reporting America: The Life
of the Nation 1946 - 2004 Cooke, Alistair Allen Lane HB 9781846140471 $16.95 Originally $59.95 Alistair
Cooke was the greatest of all 20thcentury reporters and interpreters of
America. This book presents the cream of his writings on the events that
shaped modern American history, from the end of WWII through to the
assassination of John F. Kennedy and of Bobby Kennedy (Cooke was actually
present), the moon landings and the Monica Lewinsky scandal. Almost all the
material is previously unpublished in book form – transcripts of his
legendary BBC Radio ‘Letters from America’ broadcasts, long-forgotten reports
in the Guardian (he was the senior New York correspondent for 30 years) and
other freshly discovered writings. The book is illustrated throughout in full
colour with iconic photographs of the events Cooke is describing |
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HIGHLIGHT The Shortest History of
Europe Hirst, John Black Inc PB 9781863954396 $24.95 The
celebrated historian offers a fascinating exploration of the qualities that
made Europe a world-changing civilisation. Clear, humorous and
thought-provoking. |
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HIGHLIGHT The Third Reich at War Evans, Richard Penguin PB 9780141015484 $29.95 The author
of The Third Reich in Power gives us a chilling history showing how the Nazis
led Germany from conquest to disaster. |
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SPECIAL PRICE - HIGHLIGHT Venice ACKROYD, PETER Chatto & Windus HB 9780701172855 $59.95 Originally $69.95 Peter
Ackroyd, author of London (Vintage. PB. $45), is unrivalled in the art of
evoking place in print. Now this masterful biographer and historian turns his
attention to Venice, that city of myth, mystery and beauty. Venice is at once
evocative and packed with facts. He leads us through the city’s history, from
the first refugees navigating the mists of the lagoon in the fourth century
to the rise of a great trading empire, the wars against Napoleon and the
tourist invasions of today. Everything is here: the merchants on the Rialto
and the Jews in the Ghetto; the mosaics of St Mark’s and the glass blowers of
Murano; the doges and the destitute. There are wars and sieges, scandals and
seductions – and, always, a dark undertone of shadowy corners and dead
ends, prisons and punishment. |
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HIGHLIGHT The Wolf: True Story of an
epic voyage of destruction in World War I Guilliatt, Richard & Hohnen, Peter Random House PB 9781741666243 $34.95 The true
story of The Wolf, a formidable German warship that terrorised Australia and
the Southern Ocean during WWI. |