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Books I have completed

Crossing The Line

War is bru­tal. But there are lines that should nev­er be crossed. In mid-2017, whis­pers of exe­cu­tions, and cov­er-ups with­in Aus­trali­a’s most secre­tive and elite mil­i­tary unit, the SAS, reached Walk­ley Award-win­ning jour­nal­ist Nick McKen­zie. He and Chris Mas­ters began an inves­ti­ga­tion that would not only reveal shock­ing truths about Ben Roberts-Smith VC but plunge the reporters into the defama­tion tri­al of the century.

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A Heart That Works

In this mem­oir of loss, acclaimed writer and come­di­an Rob Delaney grap­ples with the frag­ile mir­a­cle of life, the mys­ter­ies of death, and the ques­tion of pur­pose for those left behind.

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The Aeneid

Flee­ing the ash­es of Troy, Aeneas, Achilles’ mighty foe in the Ili­ad, begins an incred­i­ble jour­ney to ful­fill his des­tiny as the founder of Rome. His voy­age will take him through stormy seas, entan­gle him in a trag­ic love affair, and lure him into the world of the dead itself — all the way tor­ment­ed by the venge­ful Juno, Queen of the Gods. Ulti­mate­ly, he reach­es the promised land of Italy where, after bloody bat­tles and with high hopes, he founds what will become the Roman empire.

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The Ninth Life Of A Diamond Miner: A Memoir

Grace Tame has nev­er walked on mid­dle ground. From a young age, her life was defined by uncer­tain­ty — by trau­ma and strength, sad­ness and hope, ter­ri­ble lows and won­drous highs. As a teenag­er she found the courage to speak up after expe­ri­enc­ing awful and ongo­ing child sex­u­al abuse. This fight to find her voice would not be her last. In 2021 Grace stepped square­ly into the pub­lic eye as the Aus­tralian of the Year, and was the cat­a­lyst for a tidal wave of con­ver­sa­tion and action. Aus­tralians from all walks of life were inspired and moved by her fire and pas­sion. Here she was using her voice, and encour­ag­ing oth­ers to use theirs too. The Ninth Life of a Dia­mond Min­er is Grace’s sto­ry, in Grace’s words, on Grace’s terms. Like Grace, it is sharply intel­li­gent, deeply felt and often blis­ter­ing­ly fun­ny. And, as with all her work, it offers a con­struc­tive and opti­mistic vision for a bet­ter future for all of us.

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France: An Adventure History

A whol­ly orig­i­nal his­to­ry of France, filled with a life­time’s knowl­edge and pas­sion-by the author of the New York Times best­seller Parisians. Begin­ning with the Roman army’s first record­ed encounter with the Gauls and end­ing in the era of Emmanuel Macron, France takes read­ers on an end­less­ly enter­tain­ing jour­ney through French his­to­ry. Fre­quent­ly hilar­i­ous, always sur­pris­ing, Gra­ham Rob­b’s France com­bines the styl­is­tic ver­sa­til­i­ty of a nov­el­ist with the deep under­stand­ing of a schol­ar. Rob­b’s own adven­tures and dis­cov­er­ies while liv­ing, work­ing, and trav­el­ing in France con­nect this tour through space and time with on-the-ground expe­ri­ence. There are scenes of wars and rev­o­lu­tions from the plains of Provence to the slums and boule­vards of Paris.

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Heart Of Darkness and Other Stories

‘The hor­ror! The hor­ror!’. These are Kurtz’s final words in Joseph Con­rad’s ‘Heart of Dark­ness’, the sto­ry of a man who trav­els into the jun­gle to seek his for­tune and who instead finds an all-con­sum­ing moral and spir­i­tu­al wilder­ness. Con­rad’s endur­ing tale served as a touch­stone for many works of fic­tion inspired by its som­bre theme. This col­lec­tion also includes an addi­tion­al five of Con­rad’s best stories.

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The Escape Artist

In April 1944 a teenag­er named Rudolf Vrba was plan­ning a dar­ing and unprece­dent­ed escape from Auschwitz. After hid­ing in a pile of tim­ber planks for three days while 3,000 SS men and their blood­hounds searched for him, Vrba and his fel­low escapee Fred Wet­zler would even­tu­al­ly cross Nazi-occu­pied Poland on foot, as pen­ni­less fugi­tives. Their mis­sion: to tell the world the truth of the Final Solu­tion. Vrba would pro­duce from mem­o­ry a breath­tak­ing report of more than thir­ty pages reveal­ing the true nature and scale of Auschwitz — a report that would find its way to Roo­sevelt, Churchill and the Pope, even­tu­al­ly sav­ing over 200,000 Jew­ish lives. A thrilling his­to­ry with enor­mous his­tor­i­cal impli­ca­tions, THE ESCAPE ARTIST is the extra­or­di­nary sto­ry of a com­plex man who would seek escape again and again: first from Auschwitz, then from his past, even from his own name. In telling his sto­ry, Jonathan Freed­land — the jour­nal­ist, broad­cast­er and acclaimed, mul­ti-mil­lion copy sell­ing author of the Sam Bourne nov­els — ensures that Rudolf Vrba’s hero­ic mis­sion will also escape oblivion.

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Bicycle Diaries

An enchant­i­ng cel­e­bra­tion of bike rid­ing and of the rewards of see­ing the world at bike lev­el, this book gives the read­er an incred­i­ble insight into what Byrne is see­ing and think­ing as he ped­als around these cities.

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Able

Dylan Alcott has nev­er let his dis­abil­i­ty get in the way of what he want­ed to achieve. In this ful­ly updat­ed edi­tion of Able, which includes sto­ries about his lat­est achieve­ments, includ­ing Wim­ble­don and the French Open, Dylan shares his sto­ry. It’s the tale of some­one who’s proud of who he is, who has a go, does every­thing with heart and soul, who always sees the upside and nev­er takes him­self too seri­ous­ly. As inspir­ing, hon­est and fun­ny as its author, Able proves that for every one thing you can’t do, there are 10,000 oth­er things that you can.

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The Incredible Life of Hubert Wilkins: Australia’s Greatest Explorer

The extra­or­di­nary, must-read sto­ry of the brave, bold Hubert Wilkins — Aus­trali­a’s most adven­tur­ous explor­er, nat­u­ral­ist, pho­tog­ra­ph­er, war hero, avi­a­tor, spy and dare­dev­il — brought to life by Aus­trali­a’s great­est sto­ry­teller. Sir Hubert Wilkins is one of the most remark­able Aus­tralians who ever lived. The son of pio­neer pas­toral­ists in South Aus­tralia, Hubert stud­ied engi­neer­ing before mov­ing on to pho­tog­ra­phy, then sail­ing for Eng­land and a job pro­duc­ing films with the Gau­mont Film Co. Brave and bold, he became a polar expe­di­tion­er, a bril­liant war pho­tog­ra­ph­er, a spy in the Sovi­et Union, a pio­neer­ing avi­a­tor-nav­i­ga­tor, a death-defy­ing sub­mariner — all while being an explor­er and chron­i­cler of the plan­et and its life forms that would do Vas­co da Gama and Sir David Atten­bor­ough proud. As a WW1 pho­tog­ra­ph­er he was twice award­ed the Mil­i­tary Cross for brav­ery under fire, the only Aus­tralian pho­tog­ra­ph­er in any war to be dec­o­rat­ed. He went on expe­di­tion with Sir Ernest Shack­le­ton, led a ground­break­ing nat­ur­al his­to­ry study in Aus­tralia and was knight­ed in 1928 for his avi­a­tion exploits, but many more astound­ing achieve­ments would fol­low. Wilkins’ quest for knowl­edge and polar explo­rations were life­long pas­sions and his mis­sions to polar regions aboard the sub­ma­rine Nau­tilus the stuff of leg­end. With mas­ter­ful sto­ry­telling skill, Peter FitzSi­mons illu­mi­nates the life of Hubert Wilkins and his incred­i­ble achieve­ments. Thrills and spills, der­ring-do, new worlds dis­cov­ered — this is the most unfor­get­table tale of the most extra­or­di­nary life lived by any Australian.

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