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Author Barry Stone has served his apprenticeship as a western movie
geek and aficionado. The Magnificent Seven, The Wild Bunch, Red
River - for 50 years the western has been the only genre in a life
that 'just ain't big enough for two'. He has written on the history
of cinema for the illustrated reference book Historica, is a
regular attendee to western premieres for FOX Studios Australia,
and was recently a guest of the Museum of Western Film History in
Independence, California. Intrigued by the idea of frontier
wilderness, of law and order vs lawlessness, and a firm belief that
'the better the bad guy, the better the film', he goes beyond the
American south-west to pay homage to the Italian and even
Australian western - and, after much deliberation, he ranks them in
order.
Humanity's written history stretches back only 5,000 years, a mere
blip on the timeline of our existence. If you want to know what it
really means to be fully human, to see the whole story, you need to
go back. Way, way back. Prehistoric humans couldn't write, but they
were adept at telling their own stories. On every continent and
outpost where they gained a foothold, they left signs for modern
man to decipher. From the Middle Bronze Age settlement of Arkaim on
the Kazakh Steppes to the temples of the Olmec in Mexico; from one
of the first European proto-cities at Nebelivka in Ukraine to the
neolithic henges of Avebury and Stonehenge; from the dolmens of
Antequera in the heart of Andalucia to the megalithic culture that
thrived in isolation on Indonesia's tiny Nias Island.
When Bruce, an abandoned collie-cross puppy, is adopted by a lively
family, he encounters more affection than ever before in his short
life. With humour and a unique charm, he describes his life with
his loving but troubled owners, and offers a sometimes hilarious
insight into the world from a dog's point of view. But when the
family is threatened, Bruce lends a paw, and uses his canine second
sight to guide the family through some difficult times. Already a
sleeper success, Barking At Winston is an authentic and endearing
tale of one family and their canine friend.
Barry Stone, author of 1001 Walks You Must Experience Before You
Die, delves into some of the lesser-known aspects of the world's
most famous - and not-quite-famous-yet - trails. The perfect
accompaniment to practical guidebooks, Stone relates how slings and
carabiners kept him from falling headlong off the Sydney Harbour
Bridge, and reports on the progress of the continental-wide
monster, the Trans Canada Trail, gaps in which are still being
filled by countless grass-roots communities. With walks that will
appeal to everyone regardless of ability, The 50 Greatest Walks of
the World includes British classics such as the Pennine Way, Offa's
Dyke Path, and the Old Man of Hoy as well as personal favourites
such as Italy's Cinque Terre Classic and the Isle of Skye's
Trotternish Ridge, one of Britain's finest ridge traverses with
almost 2,500m of ascents. Whether it's a climb, a stroll, or a
life-changing slog, this book has the walk for you.
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