Great Australian World Firsts [electronic resource] : The Things We Made, the Things We Did
Spicer, Chrystopher J.2012
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From Sir Jack Brabham (first to win a Grand Prix in a car of his own design) to Tom Angove (inventor of the wine cask), from Bruce Thompson (introduced the first dual flush toilets) to Mary Fortune (the first female author of detective fiction) - here are the world's great ideas, inventions, feats and follies - as done first, by Australians. Did you know that Australians were actually the first in the world to: -- put wine in cardboard casks -- explore both the Arctic and Antarctic by air -- invent a portable pacemaker -- manufacture and market the one-piece bathing suit -- develop the wire-guided missile? Australians are among the most outstanding innovators on the planet, leading the world in achievements across many fields such as sport, the arts, medicine, transport and exploration. Before Arthur Conan Doyle, Australia's own Mary Fortune was the first female author of detective fiction and one of the most prolific crime writers of the nineteenth century. The glowing fire of Australian opals would have probably remained unknown to the world gem market if it hadn't been for Tullie C. Wollaston. Kay Cottee was the first woman to complete a single-handed non-stop circumnavigation of the world by sea, and long before the successes of Mark Webber there was Sir Jack Brabham, the first person to win a Formula One World Championship in a car that he designed himself. Great Australian World Firsts tells the stories of thirty remarkable Australians, many of whom are long overdue for recognition, and will delight and inspire with insights into unique human achievement.
Main title:
Great Australian World Firsts [electronic resource] : The Things We Made, the Things We Did / Chrystopher J Spicer
Author:
Spicer, Chrystopher J., Author
Imprint:
[Place of publication not identified] : Allen & Unwin, 2012
Collation:
1 online resource (1 text file)
Biography/History:
In 2002, Chrystopher J. Spicer became an Australian who was first when his acclaimed biography Clark Gable was published in the United States by McFarland to mark the centenary of Gable's birth. Empire film magazine observed that the biography had a 'meticulously researched and respectful approach'. Spicer has been writing about Australian and American film and history for many years. He was a contributing editor of the former monthly Australian arts magazine The Melburnian, and has written for a number of magazines and newspapers in Australia and the U.S. He was also a major contributor to the Encyclopedia of Melbourne (Cambridge University Press, 2004), the first encyclopedia of an Australian city to be compiled in this country. Spicer teaches writing at James Cook University in Queensland.
ISBN:
9781742693750
Language:
English
Subject:
BRN:
326321
More Information:
Location | Collection | Call number | Status/Desc |
---|---|---|---|
Online | Online resource (Member logon) | Libby, by Overdrive - eBook |