This book encapsulates the working life of Sue Lloyd-Roberts, a video journalist for 30 years who often reported on human rights abuses around the world.
This informative book has been released to coincide with the current SA Maritime Museum exhibition of over 350 works from Nicolas Baudin’s exploration of the largely uncharted southern continent we now know as Australia.
An illustrated coffee table book about coffee, breaking down our favourite brew from the bean to the drink and everything in between.
A clear, concise coffee table book that explains the history and differences of beers, how to make your own home brew, and who the top 5 breweries are in the world.
An essay on industrial capitalism arguing for a recognition that, for all the personal benefits it may bring, it does so at the cost that can't be sustained.
An indispensable guide to being a man in the modern world, from fashion to first dates, grooming to job interviews, and cocktails to changing a tyre.
A self-help resource outlining how to better cope with the impact and ramifications of being bullied and how to avoid being the target of bullying.
One of the most comprehensive and lavish books on the history of motion pictures, from the silent era through to the end of the 1990s.
A dictionary and phrasebook on how to write using nothing but emoji, written by the same author who republished the novel Moby Dick entirely written in emoji!
Through friendship, resignation, humour and collapsing deals, There’s a Fax from Bruce pulls aside the curtain to reveal the true nature of making films.
A sumptuous coffee table book and a fascinating introduction to the role of French explorers around Australia’s southern coasts in the 18th and 19th centuries.
An anthology of poems for teachers of years 5-8, easily navigated to peruse poems based on author or to seek insight into enhancing curriculum requirements.
Sonia St Claire has an important and interesting story to tell. Unfortunately, it is difficult to find it in her newly published memoir “The Girl in the Locker”. Sonia and her twin sister, Sarah, spent the first 14 years of their lives in various orphanages around Sydney, in the fifties and sixties