|
Lee
Miller
Carolyn
Burke
Bloomsbury
426
pages, $49.95
 |
| Lee Miller |
LEE
Miller model, actress, inventive photographer and among
other things, war correspondent.
This full-length biography is a fabulous read and a great
insight into her remarkable life and those of the 1930s and
40s avant-garde.
Miller was involved with many of the leading artists in Paris
and New York including Jean Coctea and Man Ray.
This in some ways later detracted from the recognition she
deserved for her own work in photography.
The period around World War II is of particular interest.
During the war she helped produce a book in London titled
Grim Glory: Pictures of Britain Under Fire.
And later, as a US war correspondent, she photographed the
Allied liberation of France, then went on to witness the fall
of Nazi Germany (the photo of her in Hitlers bath is
still considered an iconic image), before photographing pits
full of dead bodies, the skeletons, and the starving survivors
scavenging for food in rubbish dumps at the concentration
camps at Dachau and Buchenwald.
CPL Damian Shovell
Books,
Baguettes and Bedbugs - The Left Bank world of Shakespeare
and Co
Jeremey
Mercer
Orion
Publishing
260
pages, $39.95
 |
| Books, Baguettes and
Bedbugs - The Left Bank world of Shakespeare and Co |
SHAKESPEARE
and Company is a bookstore in Paris, famous as much for its
occupants as it is for its books.
Writers from all over the world have stayed amongst its clutter,
free-of-charge, and it has been a source of inspiration to
many.
Books Baguettes and Bedbugs is one mans story of his
experience staying at the bookstore. Journalist Jeremy Mercer
landed in Paris after outing a criminal source in his newspaper
in Canada and was forced to flee after threats on his life.
The book is an intriguing tale of struggle and living on a
combination of wits and luck in a city which seemingly offers
so much.
It explores the curious characters that come and go in the
bookstore and in particular the owner, George.
Books Baguettes and Bedbugs is delightful read that takes
you into some of the seedier sides of Paris, but demonstrates
the real spirit of human kindness in the stores owner.
Rachel Irving
Furphy
the water cart and the world
John
Barnes and Andrew Furphy
Australian
Scholarly Publishing Pty Ltd
142
pages, $39.95
 |
| Furphy the water cart
and the world |
ITS
no furphy that theres a new book about Furphies.
Furphy The Water Cart and The World explores the recent
history of a family name that came to prominence in Australia
firstly as a Shepparton-based family producing inventive farm
machinery (and most famously the water cart), to its more
readily identified place in the Australian vernacular, after
being adopted by World War I soldiers as a colloquialism for
rumour.
Much of the family history wont be of great interest,
but the chapters on the appropriation of the word furphy,
and its links to soldiers on the battlefields, will be.
The book tells how Furphy water carts were used at training
camps in World War I, and theres also some interesting
quotes from CEW Beans The Anzac Book which credited
nearly all the camp rumours had their origin in these
groups near the rubbish carts.
Bean also considered the drivers of these carts as being a
great source of rumour-mongering.
CPL Damian Shovell
|