Monday, June 28, 2021

SOLD A rare collection of travel journalism

 



SOLD

Rare collection. Excellent condition. PB. 196pp. $20 including postage anywhere in Australia.

A collection of writing on travel from across the globe: Jan Morris drops into the fabled Harry's Bar in Venice; a hapless Redmond O'Hanlon battles the insect population of the Amazon; Colin Thubron declines to partake of steamed sheep's head for tea in Tajikistan; Frank Moorhouse laments the tyrany of tipping in New York; in Cairo, Michael Palin finds himself cast as a movie extra; P.J. O'Rourke seeks refuge from eco-tourism in Peru; Robyn Davidson dons a leather jacket and motorbikes it across America; and after years of reflecting on the absurdities on life on other planets, Douglas Adams finds out what's happening to life on this one, visiting the famous Komodo dragons of Indonesia.

Helen Reddy on Helen Reddy

 



Excellent condition. PB. 358pp. $20 including postage anywhere in Australia.
With her song ‘IAm Woman', Helen Reddy provided the feminist anthem of the 1970s. In this highly anticipated memoir, Helen reveals that she is much more than the entertainer who first graced the stage at the age of four.
Helen Reddy became the first Australian to win a Grammy, to have her own prime-time variety show on a US television network and to have three number-one hit singles in the same year. then, at the height of her career, Helen's world was shattered by the death of both her parents and also the news that she had a rare, incurable disease.
In this riveting, frank and ultimately brave memoir, Helen reveals the emotional highs and lows that have shaped her as an artist and as a complex woman with a rich inner life sustained by a strong spiritual faith.

Growing up for girls

 



Mint condition. PB. 280pp. $15 including postage anywhere in Australia.

This book prepares girls for what to expect from puberty and offers advice on what they can do to cope with the emotional, psychological and physical changes and stay happy and confident as they go through their early teens. 

It covers all the topics that girls want to find out about, including moods and feelings, periods and how to survive them, what happens to boys, diet, eating disorders, exercise, body image, sex and relationships, contraception, sexual health, self-confidence, drink and drugs, exam stress, cyberbullying, and staying safe - both out and about and online. 

It guides young teenagers through this exciting and sometimes daunting stage as they start taking full responsibility for many aspects of their own lives for the first time.

SOLD An anthology of the best travel writing

 



SOLD

Excellent condition. PB. 528pp. $20 including postage anywhere in Australia.

The topics in this book range from letters from ancient Egypt to a terrifying hyena attack in Kenya. The authors question the idea of travel writing and argue that travel writing can span many styles and ideas, as well as continents.

About the author

Robyn Davidson was born on a cattle property in Queensland, Australia. She went to Sydney in the late sixties, then spent time studying in Brisbane before moving to Alice Springs, where the events of this book begin. Since then, she has traveled extensively, living in London, New York, and India. In the early 1990s, she migrated with and wrote about nomads in northwestern India. She is now based in Melbourne, but spends several months a year in the Indian Himalayas.

On the path of snakebites

 



Rare travelogue in search of snakes! Excellent condition. PB. 352pp. $25 including postage anywhere in Australia. 

Snakes are Jeremy Seal's fascination, and his greatest fear. In an attempt to overcome his phobia, he decides to journey into America, Australia, Africa and India in search of the most notorious and deadly snakes, and to meet the people who live among them. 

His travels take him to Kenya's snake man, whose entire life seems like a preparation for a bite from the terrible black mamba, and to witch doctors, who use snakes as instruments of vengeance. 

He recalls the stories of Australian convicts condemned to prison in the land of the world's deadliest snake, and the story of a Southern preacher who tries to murder his wife with his church's rattlesnakes. 

Mixed in with all these bizarre tales are fascinating scientific facts, snake lore and ancient legends.

An erudite but highly entertaining travel narrative, The Snakebite Survivors' Club taps into our general fear of snakes to tell a funny and somewhat gruesome account of the world of snakes and the people they repel, mesmerize, and sometimes kill.

SOLD Journey through the Moroccan Desert

 



SOLD

Another rare travelogue, this time through the Moroccan desert. PB. Mint condition. 335pp. $30 including postage anywhere in Australia.

The 450-mile-long Draa River Valley in the Moroccan Sahara contains some of the most sumptuous oases and searing desert of the Arab world. Jeffrey Tayler follows the Draa by foot and on camel, recounting stays in casbah homes, visits to mosques and marabouts, and nights in hashish dens.

About the author

Jeffrey Tayler is a U.S.-born author and journalist. He is the Russia correspondent for the Atlantic Monthly and a contributor to several other magazines as well as to NPR's All Things Considered. He has written several non-fiction books about different regions of the world which include Facing the Congo, Siberian Dawn, Glory in a Camel's Eye, and Angry Wind, the latter being a portrait of a journey through the Muslim portion of black Africa. His most recent book, River of No Reprieve, is about a challenging raft trip down Russia's Lena River.

Tayler is an accomplished linguist; in addition to his native English, he is fluent in Russian, Arabic, French, and modern Greek, and has a functioning knowledge of Spanish and Turkish.


SOLD Travels through Xinjiang

 



SOLD

Very rare book. A classic travelogue through parts of Xinjiang that are now forbidden to outsiders. PB. 288pp. $25 including postage anywhere in Australia.

This is a first-hand account of how a tall blonde Western woman travelled in disguise as a Chinese man (in Pathan cap, old grey jacket and big padded trousers), through the remote, forbidden and perilous parts of Southern China, in search of an ancient kingdom and the fabulous 2nd-century wall paintings left untouched for thousands of years. 

Christa Paula, a young German student of Central Asian art and archaelogy has something of the same adventurous spirit as her friend Nick Danziger. 

The area she set out to discover in 1989/90 was under military rule, closed to Westerners as well as to most Chinese, and it was in the company of Chang, a taxi-driver and self-styled Chinese James Dean, that she continued her journey. 

They travelled through an area dotted with nuclear testing sites, forced labour camps, and mines in which prisoners dig and process asbestos without protective clothing.


The real Mrs Brown

 



Excellent condition. PB. 295pp. $18 including postage anywhere in Australia.
The bestselling authorised biography of Brendan O'Carroll, based on extensive interviews Brian Beacom conducted with the hugely popular star of Mrs Brown's Boys.
Who'd have thought a potty-mouthed Dublin mammy with a cream cardigan and elasticated tan tights could storm British TV screens and leave a nation helpless with laughter?
Brendan O'Carroll performs to tens of thousands of people a night in packed-out stadiums across the country. In the last four years, his TV show has become a No.1 ratings success and he's even making a movie.
But Brendan has had to battle hard for success. The youngest of eleven children, his mother was Maureen O'Carroll, a former nun who went on to become the first woman to be elected to the Irish parliament. Brendan adored his strong, widowed mother - and she later became the inspiration for his indomitable character Agnes Brown.
However, the family endured poverty reminiscent of Angela's Ashes and Brendan saw no option but to leave school at 12 to work. He married young and for decades struggled to make ends meet. Eventually, bankrupt and desperate, Brendan went to see a fortune teller who told him she could see his future achieving worldwide success as a comedian and actor. At first Brendan laughed at the notion, but then he thought of how much his friends loved his gags, and decided to give it a go...
This is the magical story of how a loveable Irishman with a wig and a wit as caustic as battery acid surprised everyone - most of all himself - by becoming one of the best-loved comedians in the world.
It is a story of hardship, heartbreak, and talent and will remind readers afresh that sometimes the facts can be even more extraordinary than the fiction.
About the Author
Brendan O'Carroll was born in Dublin in 1955, the youngest of eleven children. He left school aged twelve and over the years worked in a variety of jobs before turning to stand-up comedy in his forties.
Since then the father-of-three has become a bestselling novelist and is now one of the world's most successful comedians. Brian Beacom is an award-winning entertainment writer at the Herald and Times group of newspapers based in Glasgow. He has written four books and two plays.

Roy Kyle's ANZAC story

 




Good condition apart from a slight tear on the side cover.
PB. 308pp. $15 including postage anywhere in Australia.
Many books have been written by officers, historians and military experts on the part the Anzacs played in the Dardanelles campaign during the First World War.
There are very few by the ordinary soldier.
Roy Kyle started writing this memoir at the age of 89 and almost completed it before he died.
A typical Anzac, fiercely patriotic, he enlisted in the A.I.F. in 1915, several months under-age.
He spent his eighteenth birthday in the terrible trenches of Gallipoli and then went on to serve on the Western Front.
An Anzac's Story is an honest, poignant account of a young man's experience of war.
It is much more than this, though, for Roy Kyle's story begins with his colourful, classic Australian childhood in country New South Wales and Victoria in the early years of last century.
Bryce Courtenay, who helped get Roy Kyle's memoirs published, has provided a moving introduction to his life and times.

About the author

Albert Roy Kyle (or Roy, as most people knew him) was born at Corowa, NSW in 1897, the third of four children.
He was working as a bank clerk in Terang when, at the age of 17 and with his parents' reluctant approval, he enlisted in the A.I.F.
He served first at Gallipoli and later in France and Belgium.
After the war he rejoined the bank and in 1920 he married Jessie Johanssen, with whom he had two children.
After Roy retired in 1960, he and Jessie moved to Geelong in Victoria, where they remained for the rest of their lives.