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  • av Dave Warner
    309,-

    A violent death by crucifixion near a remote north-west station has Detective Inspector Dan Clement and his Broome police officers disturbed and baffled. Other local incidents - the theft of explosives from a Halls Creek mine site, social justice protests at an abattoir, a break-in at an early childhood clinic - seem mundane by comparison. But as Clement starts to make troubling connections between each crime, he finds himself caught in a terrifying race. In a landmass larger than Western Europe, he must identify and protect an unknown target before it is blown to bits by an invisible enemy. After the Flood is the thrilling new novel in the award-winning Dan Clement series. PRAISE FOR THE BOOK 'Warner has endowed his work with both a great sense of location and of intrigue ... A wonderfully satisfying example of Australian crime fiction.' Sandy's Book a Day Blog 'Gritty with well-realised characters and a taut plot, this is an outstanding crime novel.' Canberra Weekly 'The story is fast-paced and intriguing ... Aussie noir at its best.' Better Reading 'The red herrings are excellent, and few readers will completely work out what's going on until Warner decides it's time to reveal all.' Beauty and Lace 'After the Flood is [a] superbly plotted crime fiction with an authentic Aussie flavour.' The Burgeoning Bookshelf

  • av Andrew Sutherland
    289

  • av Leigh Straw
    365

    In August 1925, Audrey Jacob shot dead her former fiancé, Cyril Gidley, in full view of hundreds of guests at a charity ball in Perth's Government House. When she was arrested, she still held the gun in her hand. It was a open and shut case of wilful murder--that is until Jacob assigned prosecutor Arthur Haynes to her defence. His ability to play the press and the jury for sympathy would lead to a sensational result. Not only did Jacob escape the gallows, she was found not guilty of Gidley's murder. Straw, the author of a number of books about notable Australian female criminals, tells a story that is rich with first-hand newspaper accounts from the day.

  • av Dave Warner
    275

    In 1963, former hitman Blake Saunders flees the Philadelphia Mob for a quieter existence in a tiny coastal Australian town. Life in Coral Shoals is perfect and Blake is a new man – running a club called the Surf Shack, and playing nights there with his surf music band, The Twang.But then a young woman's body is found at a local motel, a matchbook from the Surf Shack on her bedside table. When Blake's friend is arrested for her murder and the local sergeant doesn't want to know, it becomes clear that it is up to Blake – a man who knows about cold-blooded killing – to protect his corner of paradise.

  • av Joanna Morrison
    309,-

    Gracie Flynn may be dead, but she's not gone. Three university friends are divided by a tragic death. Eighteen years later, chance reunites them. Robyn is still haunted by memories of her best friend Gracie, and Cohen's heart has never healed. Only Sam seems to have moved on and found success and happiness. But death rocks their lives again when Sam's body is found in mysterious circumstances. And the ghost of Gracie Flynn has a story to tell about the night that changed their lives forever. The Ghost of Gracie Flynn is a crime mystery novel with a paranormal twist.

  • av Karen Herbert
    309,-

    Josh is a sweet, well-meaning university student with a big heart. After he impulsively steals two research mice from a campus laboratory, he hides them in the basement of the retirement village where he works. The mice are happy and so is Josh, until he discovers that the lab mice could cause a deadly disease. Enter a cat called Harley, a dog called Bobby, the arrival of some mysterious packing boxes, and a strange spike in the village's water bill. As the clock ticks, and disaster looms, can the efforts of the Harewood Hall residents save the day?

  • av Brett Adams
    319

    US exchange student Hieronymous Beck is Professor Jack Griffen's biggest fan. Why else would he inveigle himself into the English Literature course that Jack is running, and why else would he devote so much time to chatting with Jack after hours about the anatomy of crime fiction, the roles of heroes and villains, and his favourite true crime book of all time, In Cold Blood? But everything changes when Jack Griffen picks up a list of five templates to murder that has been written by Beck. The mild-mannered professor who has never incurred anything more than a parking fine suddenly finds himself in a deadly race to protect those he loves, as he is plunged into Hiero's crime writer's fantasy and the darkness of his student's heart.

  • av Liz Byrski
    285,-

  • av Kyle Hughes-Odgers
    245

    What spins the Earth? Do colors smell? Why is water wet? Where do dreams go? Renowned artist Kyle Hughes-Odgers brings his own unique vision to these and many other questions, from the practical to the philosophical.

  • av Dennis Haskell
    279

    but in fact / we are as we are / together, alone, as you can see, / with elusive memories for company, /with your wisps of hair / disappearing as gently as breath. ‘After Chemo' Ahead of Us is Dennis Haskell's eighth book of poetry. Dedicated to his wife Rhonda, who lost her battle with cancer after a long illness, Ahead of Us contains poems of love, of two people forging a partnership together and of the inevitable end of that partnership when one person dies. It is a celebration of life and and of the fragile thread that holds us here.

  • av Van Koesveld Robert
    505

    Introducing a small, little known country in South Asia, this stunning photographic journey pays tribute to Bhutan's beautiful ancient culture and landscape. Based on travels from west to east, the text and photographs focus on themes such as history, lifestyle, beliefs, democratization, and environment. This is a visual, informative, and personal account of Bhutan at a time when its government is changing from feudal to democratic and its people are deciding how to balance materialism with spiritualism.

  • av John Mateer
    255

  • av Stanley Breeden
    629

    Spotlighting the finest wildflowers in the southwestern Australia, this reference blends travel narrative with exquisite photography, shedding light on an area so rich and varied that it has been designated one of the world's 39 "hotspots" of biodiversity. This stunning exploration encapsulates the rich variety of colors, shapes, textures, nuances, and combinations of the region's foliage with unique macro images from a pair of award-winning photographers.

  • av David Whish-Wilson
    285,-

  • av Sally Morgan
    245

    A young Aboriginal girl is taken from the north of Australia and sent to an institution in the distant south. There, she slowly makes a new life for herself and, in the face of tragedy, finds strength in new friendships. Poignantly told from the child's perspective, Sister Heart affirms the power of family and kinship. This compelling novel about the stolen generations helps teachers sensitively introduce into the classroom one of world's most confronting histories.

  • av Philippa Nikulinsky
    329

    Previously published as: Banksia menziesii. South Fremantle, W.A.: Fremantle Arts Centre Press, 1992.

  • av Philippa Nikulinsky
    565

    Featuring incredible artwork, this book celebrates Cape Arid National Park, a fascinating and remote area on the far southeastern coast of Western Australia, through finely detailed botanical watercolors, sweeping black and white landscapes, and an intimate written record of the authors' journeys. Highlighting the area's biodiversity, this account also identifies and labels each depicted species.

  • av Meg McKinlay
    145

    What's a girl to do when her house can't find a home? Bella is very surprised one morning to discover her house has moved in the night – not a lot, just a little. Her parents are too busy to notice, but even they can't pretend it's not happening when they wake up a few days later to find their house on the banks of a lake. Night after night, the house moves and the family wakes to a new location. Bella discusses it with her beloved Grandpa, and he advises her to keep a close eye on things. When Bella realizes that her room at the top of the house is built from Grandpa's old boat, she finally knows what the house is looking for. It seeks the sea. So Bella dons the captain's hat her Grandpa has given her and guides the house safely to the shore, where finally they are home. And sometimes, just sometimes, Grandpa and Bella take the house to sea.

  • av Jim Richards
    309

    When young Jim Richards left the army to make to chase a dream, he had no language skills, no money and no idea, just the kind of gold lust that has driven fortune hunters throughout history. And when he struck gold and diamonds in the remote rivers of Guyana, his problems and his success grew in equal measure. Jim Richards has done it all: dived for diamonds in the piranha-infested rivers of South America; discovered a fabulously rich goldmine in the Australian outback; got caught up in the world's biggest mining scam in Indonesia; and even started a gold rush in the war-torn jungles of Laos. Jim Richards has gone on to found a string of successful mining businesses. Today he is one of the industry's most respected executives – although his many enemies would disagree.

  • av Lloyd Jones Madison & Gare Deborah
    389

    As Australia's largest wartime port, Fremantle played a unique role in the western world's military history. Featuring extraordinary photographs from the time, this volume records Fremantle's history of departure and reunion, victory and celebration, grief and loss, and dissent and activism.

  • av Stanley Breeden
    390

    High on the hills of the Atherton Tablelands in far north Queensland stands a glasshouse built by orchid expert Bruce Gray. Whether from the cloud forests of South America, the Himalayan Mountains of India, the mangroves of the Philippines, the rocky outcrops of Madagascar or the dense rainforests of New Guinea, tropical species thrive here. Award-winning photographers Stanley and Kaisa Breeden capture the plants in rich, detailed images. Step into the orchid house to discover this extraordinary and diverse world.

  • av Kelly Canby
    259,-

    One day Charlie finds a hole. A hole of his very own! He picks it up and pops it in his pocket. But it doesn't take Charlie long to realize that a hole in your pocket is not a good thing to have.

  • av Julienne van Loon
    245

  • av Dale Kentwell & Sally Mayman
    405

    The Dampier Peninsula in Australia's Northwest is home to many remote Aboriginal communities. Painter Dale Kentwell and photographer Sally Mayman have collaborated with the people of the region in a series of portraits that depicts remote community life. At the heart of these portraits is a strong and enduring connection to country. The authors have pledged to donate their royalties from sales of the book to the Dampier Peninsula communities.

  • av Sharron Booth
    309,-

  • av Tim Richards
    295

    Freelance travel writer and Lonely Planet guidebook contributor Tim Richards decides to shake up his life by taking an epic rail journey across Australia. Jumping aboard iconic trains like the Indian Pacific, Overland, and Spirit of Queensland, he covers over 7,000 kilometres, from the tropics to the desert and from big cities to ghost towns. Tim's journey is one of classic travel highs and lows: floods, cancellations, extraordinary landscapes, and forays into personal and public histories-as well as the steady joy of random strangers encountered along the way.

  • av Mihaela Nicolescu
    279

  • av Daniel Craig
    389

    At the beginning of spring, photographer Daniel Craig immersed himself in life on a cattle station and the harsh beauty of outback Australia. With dusty light streaming through nearly image, Daniel Craig has captured the personalities of the stockmen - fit hardworking men and women of the outback - and all the excitement of the muster, the tones of earth and metal, denim, leather, grit, and red dirt in a place where people work hard and down tools for a cold beer and rodeo after the sun has gone down. Accompanied by written observations from the photographer, the reader receives insight into what happens on the other side of the lens, a rare perspective from behind the camera.

  • av Kim Scott
    269

    Examining ideas of belonging and being an outsider, this story follows Billy, a young school teacher and drifter who arrives in Australia's remote far north in search of his past, his Aboriginal roots, and his future. Through masterful language and metaphor, as well as a sophisticated tone that is both subtle and spirited, the novel finds Billy in a region not only of abundance and beauty but also of conflict, dispossession, and dislocation. On the frontier between cultures, Billy must find where he belongs in what is ultimately a powerful portrayal of the discovery of self and a sensitive exploration of race and culture.

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