
As with a reviewer on Amazon, my knowledge of Australia's history (or Australia itself) was limited to "Crocodile Dundee, Mad Max and Steve Irwin" and a number of great bands, along with the fact that she was settled originally as a penal colony. Written by a Brit, this book tells the history OK, but focuses a lot (a bit too much, in my estimation) on the machinations of internal Australian politics, 1800 - present. Regardless a good read if you're looking for knowledge outside of Men at Work.
A three-month's boat trip from the Mother Country, Australia had to truly start from scratch with its union of disparate, far-flung states and in putting together a constitution (for which they took parts of both America's and South Africa's documents). Rather admirable, if you think about it, that virtually all of their institutions were organically derived. A somewhat minor irritating recurring theme throughout the read, though, was the author's regular pot-shots at the United States. For example, though Australians treated the Aborigines much as our early and contemporary government did the Native Americans, he felt the need to deride our experience liberally. Also, he saves good venom for US policy during WWII and Vietnam, claiming the US led Australia around by the nose. Maybe they did….. Seemed like a bit of jealousy, however.
Cap'n Cat gives this book a 4 claws rating (out of five).
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Nearing the end of this one right now:

This is one of those "can't put it down" books. It chronicles the Six Day War between the Israelis and the Arab coalition comprised mostly of Egypt, Syria and Jordan in June of 1967. The subtitle says it all, this conflict set the stage for the "modern Middle East".
The most brilliant piece is the first chapter, entitled "Context", which tells the story of the run up to the war, the history behind the conflict for anyone still confused about why these peoples are at each others throats for perpetuity. I'd recommend the book just for that chapter as one learns the in-depth history of Jews vs. Palestine from the early 1900's up to the war.
Exhaustively researched, subsequent chapters tackle individual days of the war and provide intimate, minute-by-minute detail of what happened - information coming from interviews of principals on both sides.
Cap'n Cat gives this one a 4 claws out of five rating.
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For lighter reading in between the above heavyweights, The Cap'n tackled this one:

Though only mildly related to the topics in our board, this book tells the story of early folk music and its protest elements, as it evolved from coffee shop-type acoustic singing and playing into its larger, louder "folk rock" electronic spawn which reached larger numbers of people. Simple songs about the plight of migrant workers and that of black people sung in small, smoke-filled hangouts became the anthemic arena-like "plugged in" songs of California bands in the late 1960's like Buffalo Springfield and CSNY, to name just a couple. Light reading, to be certain, and for fans of music history only (Z wouldn't dig this, stuck as he is, still masturbating to Def Leppard's "Photograph").
Cap'n Cat gives this one 3 claws out of five.
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