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THIS MONTH'S FEATURE: TUI DE ROY, GERALD DURRELL
- New and Noteworthy: Best of 2008
- Picture Books: Travel, Trains, Canyons, China
- Featured Photographer: Tui de Roy
- World Atlases: New & Ultimate
- Journals & Globes: Leather, Illuminated, Best selling
- Featured Author: Gerald Durrell
- Movies & Music: Galapagos, Antarctica, Mali
- Penguin Classics: Favorites, The Complete Library
- Family Reading: A Little History of the World
Dear Traveler,
We launched longitudebooks.com ten years ago this month -- and we've been sending these monthly e-mail
newsletters of what's new and noteworthy and of interest since 2002.
It's high time for some color, don't you think? This holiday season
we're tempting you with our favorite books of the year, favorite
Penguin Classics (or the whole 1,082-title library), a roundup of
picture books, world atlases, movies, music and more.
With big thanks for all the support -- and Free Shipping (on orders of $50 or more, please). CHECKOUT CODE: HOLIDAY
Daniel Kaizer and Darrel Schoeling longitudebooks.com 800-342-2164
1. NEW & NOTEWORTHY: BEST OF 2008
We've got a mix of travel, essay, literature and history, including these two captivating memoirs and a new field guide, all three coincidentally by women.
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Haphazardly
schooled by her free-spirited mother and left to roam the bush, Robyn
Scott writes with warmth and candor of her unconventional upbringing in
Botswana, including her grandpa Ivor, personal pilot to the first
president of Botswana, her father's work in medical clinics, pets,
siblings, neighbors and her many adventures.
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Sharon
Chester hauled out her field notes and consulted Chilean colleagues for
this splendid natural history guide, covering the wildlife, plants and
nature of Chile in detail. With 120 color plates, maps, engaging
succinct text and terrific introductory chapters, it's both compact and
comprehensive.
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In
this endearing, offbeat memoir, Christina Thompson, an anthropologist
and editor, effortlessly moves between well-told tales of European
early encounters, mostly disastrous, with the Maori (her area of
research) and the story of her surprising life with Seven, the Maori
she married.
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2. ILLUSTRATED
We
like words but sometimes, especially this time of year, what you really
want is a nice picture book. Here are some our favorite new gift books which combine the best of both.
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From
Afghanistan to Zimbabwe, this clever six-and-a-half-inch-square
celebration of travel shows off the world in beautiful full color
photos. We've also got Lonely Planet's coffee-table worthy The Europe Book (EUR317, $40.00), in which each country gets a glossy two-page spread.
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This
comprehensively illustrated and authoritative history by Oxford
University Press combines maps, drawings, photographs and concise
essays by experts including Ann Savours (Antarctic) and John Ure (South
America).
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Inspired
by the steamer trunks of old, this beautifully packaged book by Patrick
Poivre D'Arvor celebrates great trains, past and present, including the
Orient Express, Trans-Siberian and California Zephyr.
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Beau
Riffenburgh chronicles the history of exploration with stories, maps,
photographs, artifacts, maps on CD-ROM - and, this is the most fun of
all, more than 30 historic documents, which can be removed, unfolded
and examined. With a doctorate from Scott Polar Research Institute,
where he is the editor of the Polar Record, Riffenburgh gives
Antarctica and the Arctic its due.
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A
foreign correspondent and celebrated photojournalist, Heung Shing Liu
selected iconic images by 76 contemporary Chinese photographers for
this oversized visual history of triumph and hardship in China since
1948.
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The
200 photographs in this magnificent book celebrate the Grand Canyon,
Bryce, Zion and lesser-known parks and preserves. Signed and numbered,
this limited edition includes 10 stunning four-foot-long gatefolds and
a signed print by author Jon Ortner (Angkor, Celestial Temples of the Khmer Empire).
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Sebastian
Copeland captures the beauty of the frozen continent with a fresh eye
in this charming little book, which includes a three-page list of
sensible suggestions to protect the planet. It includes many images
from the oversized Antarctica, The Global Warning.
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3. TUI DE ROY: PHOTOGRAPHER, NATURALIST CONSERVATIONIST
We are offering all these books, including Tui and Mark Jones's Galapagos, Wild Portraits, as a package of five for $175, a 25% discount.
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It's
so good that we've gone ahead and imported the 10th anniversary edition
of author, naturalist, photographer and friend Tui de Roy's original
stunning celebration of the landscapes, wildlife and habitats of
Galapagos from overseas. Raised in the Galapagos with a camera in hand,
Tui de Roy has roamed everywhere in the islands, including stunning
images of volcanic eruptions, scenes from the highlands, and the
underwater ballet of sharks, penguins, seals and whales.
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The
product of extensive travels in the region (her stories are many),
Tui's 350 stunning color photographs take in the full sweep of the
Andes, its wildlife and landscapes, from the cloud forests of Ecuador
to windswept Tierra del Fuego.
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Having
relocated many years ago to Golden Bay on the South Island of New
Zealand, Tui and Mark Jones present the wildlife, habitats and splendor
of their adopted homeland in this oversized photographic celebration.
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This
remarkable collection of 300 photographs of the ocean wanderers, both
at sea and on the nest, is not just beautiful. It's also an
authoritative survey of the natural history, status and conservation of
the world's Diomedeidae. Like the albatross, the roving tem of Tui de
Roy, Mark Jones and Julian Fitter have logged many miles on the sea,
their experience very much in evidence here. You haven't lived until
you've seen Tui, hauled over the gunwale, head and shoulders plunged
into icy water, to capture just the right photograph (and while driving
the boat).
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4. WORLD ATLASES: DEFINITIVE, CONTENDER, CONCISE, POCKET
Go
ahead and get one. We're offering the most authoritative and complete
modern atlas, even better in its just released 12th edition, and a
worthy new contender (bigger type, fits on your desk, reading glasses
not needed) at 30% off. We've got more favorite Atlases of the World, including the National Geographic World Atlas for Young Explorers (WLD116, $24.95), along with Specialty Atlases on themes including wine, religion and languages.
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For
its coverage, scale and index, this gorgeous atlas is unequalled. Each
double-page spread is a whopping 16" x 22" and the index includes a
mind-boggling 200,000 place names. Offered at 30% off the $285 cover
price.
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With
its beautiful shaded physical relief, crystal-clear type, city maps and
individual maps of the 50 U.S. states, this extravagantly produced,
leather-bound atlas shows off the world in striking, digital
cartography. It fits much more easily on a desk than the Times Atlas
but, as a tradeoff, it sacrifices some scale and includes fewer place
names. 30% off the $250 price.
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An excellent value, this desk atlas features the same fine digital cartography and clear maps as its glamorous cousin.
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Keep this handy reference, which includes a gazetteer of nations, time zone map and world statistics, within easy reach.
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5. JOURNALS & GLOBES: EVERY HOME NEEDS A GLOBE
Give
it a whirl! Globes aren't just beautiful, they show, without the
distortion of a flat map, our true Earth. We've got desk and floor
models, illuminated and not, in a variety of styles, including these
favorites.
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These
are the much-loved globes with the real topography you can touch and
feel, since 1930 applied by hand in Chicago -- founder Luther
Replogle's cry "A Globe in Every Home." The White House has a Diplomat (GLB25, $8500.00), pictured left. Our best-selling globe, the Pioneer (GLB11, $65.00), is a brightly colored, blue-ocean desk model on a
gyro-mount (which means you can turn it any which way). We also like
the sophisticated Sierra (GLB19, $74.00), in earth tones with an antique brass-colored stand, and the retro black ocean Starlight (GLB10, $74.00). See them all online.
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These
striking 14-inch-diameter, illuminated globes -- constructed of nearly
indestructible fiberglass -- are printed on the inside with multiple
layers of ink and information, giving the globes the impression of
depth. Featuring the instantly recognizable National Geographic
cartography, these bigger globes really are better; the larger diameter
(the standard desk model is 12 inches) means a better scale and many
more place names. Available as desk or floor models, blue ocean or
earth tone, $249-$679. Our most popular model, the Journey (GLB14, $249.00), pictured left, is a classic with a blue-gray base, semi-meridian and realistic color for land and sea.
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We
like these supple Italian-made journals by teNeues for their
lightweight heft, rich colors, shark-skin-textured leather covers, sewn
binding and lightly lined paper. Individually boxed, they make a fine
gift.
The large journal (6 x 8, $55), pictured left, is available in dark brown (our favorite), along with pleasing orange, basic black and forest green. The slightly smaller version ($45, 4 3/4/ x 6 1/2) comes in Light Green, Red, Saffron and Orange.
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6. GERALD DURRELL: CORFU, MICK WIGGINS
Charming, irreverent, exuberant, Gerald Durrell (brother of literary giant Lawrence) wrote a string of delightful tales about his family and of his adventures around the world, often
collecting animals for his zoo, renamed the Durrell Wildlife
Conservation Trust, on Jersey. You can see Gerry amongst the penguins
(no, that's not Darrel) on the cover of our 10th anniversary catalog.
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Mick
Wiggins did the illustration of Durrell amongst the penguins
(Magellanics in this case) for this sparkling account of an eight-month
jaunt on the trail of fur seals, guanaco, parrots and other Patagonian
marvels.
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Durrell
recounts his hilarious, eventful childhood on sun-drenched Corfu in the
1930s in this first of his many books. Hilary Bradt, founder of Bradt
Guides, friend and travel pioneer, recently picked it as her favorite
travel book, available in a 50th anniversary edition along with its
equally delightful sequel, Birds, Beasts, and Relatives (MED80, $14.00). With charming new covers by (guess who?) the talented Mick Wiggins.
(Masterpiece
Theater made My Family and Other Animals into a 2006 movie starring
Imelda Staunton (Vera Drake) as the unflappable Mrs. Durrell, now
available on DVD.)
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The
good folks at Godine have returned to print this farrago of five
wickedly funny tales of Durrell's engagingly eccentric family and
passion for all things in nature, skipping from Corfu to England, the
British Cameroons and Jersey.
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Also
back in print is brother Larry's classic ode to Corfu, its history,
myths and resilient people. It's set, not during childhood, but during
the just-married, 25-year-old Durrell's five-year idyll on the island
in the 1930s.
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7. MUSIC & MOVIES: WORLD MUSIC NETWORK, ATTENBOROUGH
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Founded
in 1994 by Phil Stanton and his Colombian-born wife Sandra
Alayón-Stanton, the World Music Network introduces the diversity of
music in scores of authoritative, expertly chosen anthologies published
in conjunction with the savvy editors at Rough Guides. You can see them
all online.
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This 3-CD boxed set features 30 choice tracks from artists across the globe.
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Practically
a soundtrack to Buenos Aires, this superb anthology by the modernist
maestro of tango includes the soulful Vuelvo al Sur.
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Much
of the music is guitar and vocal driven but this compilation also
features beautiful traditional instruments like the kora, njarka,
balafon and djembe drum. Like all the titles, it comes with a
mini-booklet on the music, the musicians and the people and culture of
the place.
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Working
alongside Oxfam, the new Think Global compilations raise money and
awareness of global issues. This disc celebrates the remarkable variety
of Christmas music from around the world, from the Louisiana two-step
and swamp blues to Venezuela's African-flavored parrandas and the
haunting winter songs of Sweden (and without nary a Frosty the Snowman
in sight).
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Ranging
from the eye-popping visuals of IMAX to groundbreaking new BBC
documentaries and feature presentations from countries like Bhutan and Mongolia, movies bring destinations to life. This is a sampling of the DVDs we carry.
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This stunning BBC documentary captures the rugged beauty, wildlife and history of the archipelago like never before.
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The great Werner Herzog, who last made a film about grizzly bears,
eschews penguins to focus on scientists, worker bees and other
eccentrics at bustling McMurdo Station in this marvelously sardonic
Antarctic doc, just released on DVD.
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This
David Attenborough production, set largely along the Antarctic
Peninsula and much of it near their base on Cuverville Island, features
amazing footage of the marine environment, penguins, birds and even
people.
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David
Breashears' stunning film, originally presented in IMAX theatres,
follows five trekkers and their local guide to the top of Africa's
highest mountain.
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8. PENGUIN CLASSICS: FAVORITES
Since
Homer's Odyssey was chosen as the first Penguin Classic in 1946, the
estimable series has grown to 1,082 books (you can get them all as a
set), taking in great fiction, epic tales of adventure, poetry, plays,
children's books and some of our favorite travel books. Many are in
bold new covers. Designer Paul Buckley and Mick Wiggins, for example,
did 21 covers for John Steinbeck's novels and travelogues, including Log From the Sea of Cortez and Travels with Charley.
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Three
travel tales, each very different in tone and all wonderful: Sea and
Sardinia is a nostalgic look at traditional ways of life; Twilight in
Italy focuses on Lawrence's memorable stay on Lake Garda; and Etruscan
Places includes his musing on ancient sites, including the painted
tombs of Tarquinia.
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Graham
Greene swirls passion, ruin, politics and absurd hope in this tale, he
called it his favorite, of a bungled kidnapping in Corrientes, a dusty
Argentine city on the border with Paraguay. Not even a real diplomat,
the whiskey drinking, broken down Charley Fortnum, a yerba farmer, is
one of Greene's great creations.
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The
most perceptive, acutely observed and personal of all his books, Peter
Matthiessen's vivid account of a five-week journey with George Schaller
combines their quest for the magnificent cat with a moving introduction
to Buddhism and the people and culture of the Himalayas.
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Bruce Chatwin's masterpiece captures the spirit of the land, history, wildlife and people of Patagonia.
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Get
the entire 1,082 Penguin Classics library (about 77 linear feet of
shelf space, in case you are measuring) at 41% off the $13,413.30
retail price.
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9. FAMILY READING: A LITTLE HISTORY OF THE WORLD
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This splendidly written, sweeping history for younger readers by E. H. Gombrich (better known for the beloved Story of Art covers the history of the world in 40 concise chapters. With its lovely
incantations, this delightful book makes a wonderful read-aloud
candidate. It's at the top of our list this season for family reading.
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Thanks all,

EOM
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