Try the "Croc Shop" in Cooktown that is where I got some of Grenville Pike's books. They do( or did ) mail orders.Quote:
Way back when I was driving tourist coaches around the country the most commonly referred to books and easiest I found for gleaning information from was any of Glenville Pikes work.
He published quite a few:
"The Men who blazed the track".
"Darwin, Australia's gateway".
"Pioneer Country".
"Veins of Carbine Hill".
"Queen of the North".
"Campfire Tales".
"The Last Frontier". to name a few.
All good reads that offer a pretty good insight into our history albeit mainly the Territory and North Queensland.
Hector Holthouse wrote some good stuff too on the Queensland side of things. Try "Cannibal Cargoes", a bit of an eye opener covering our sordid history in the Kannaka trade days.
So far I havent seen a listing of what I consider to be the Australian classic adventure. "A Fortunate Life" by A.B. Facey. Perhaps not a history book in the true sense of the word but that book opened up so many exploratory avenues in my own family history that I consider it to be a prime requisite read.
Mandaley Perkins "Tropic Tide" is another good read, the story of a larger than life adventurer, VB Perkins, who worked alongside 'Weary' Dunlop on the Thai-Burma railway, worked in the Malayan jungles during the post war emergency, then set up the Territory's first major shipping line, and more.
An interesting thread. I have added a few books to my must read list from it. Thanks.
Regards
Glen

