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Paul Carter

    6 novembre 1951

    Paul Carter est un écrivain dont l'enfance nomade lui a inculqué une perspective unique sur le monde. Ses histoires explorent souvent les complexités de l'identité et de l'appartenance, façonnées par le mouvement constant et les diverses rencontres culturelles. La prose de Carter se caractérise par un sens aigu du détail d'observation et une interrogation philosophique sous-jacente sur la condition humaine. Son œuvre invite les lecteurs à contempler la nature fluide du foyer et la recherche universelle de connexion à travers des paysages très variés.

    Don't Tell Mum I Work on the Rigs
    Is that Bike Diesel, Mate?
    This Is Not A Drill
    Ride Like Hell and You'll Get There
    Tales of A Country Doctor
    The Further Tales of A Country Doctor
    • The Further Tales of A Country Doctor

      • 310pages
      • 11 heures de lecture
      4,4(8)Évaluer

      There are no secrets in a small country town but if you open your mind as well as your heart, who knows what's around the corner. Twenty five years ago Paul Carter moved from inner city Melbourne to regional Victoria on a tree-changing whim. But in a country town you are not just simply the family doctor, you are also a confidante, advocate, priest, batsman, bowler, banker, topic of gossip and even best man. In the spirit of James Herriot and Whitney Otto, the Further Tales of a Country Doctor are Paul's stories of the tapestries of life overseeing a country practice. Rich, spirited, irresistible, sombre but overwhelmingly uplifting, the humanity of these stories will stay with you for a long time.

      The Further Tales of A Country Doctor
    • Tales of A Country Doctor

      • 310pages
      • 11 heures de lecture
      4,5(4)Évaluer

      One cold winter night, on my way to have dinner with friends, I got stuck in traffic. There had been an accident at the lights ahead. As I sat there in the dark and the wet, waiting for the mess to be cleared, I glanced across the road. There on a noticeboard outside a rundown weatherboard church was a message 'Unless you change direction you will end up where you are going'. 'It's a sign,' I said, 'Ha ha!' But I had already taken the message to heart. Paul Carter was a successful doctor with a thriving practice in Melbourne but his personal life had reached a crossroads and the buzz of the city had turned to a grey and grimy drudge. The answer to his problems he decided, was to move to the country to a house on a hill overlooking a lake. Tales of A Country Doctor are Paul's stories of adjusting to life in a small town, and how he came to meet his best mate Hardy, the Munsterlander. Compelling, delightful and surprising, these charming stories of life, loss and healing in a country town will transport you and renew your faith in humanity.

      Tales of A Country Doctor
    • Ride Like Hell and You'll Get There

      • 260pages
      • 10 heures de lecture
      3,3(4)Évaluer

      ATTEMPTING 300KPH on an untested experimental motorcycle could be considered a perfect way to kill yourself, but Paul Carter is still, well, PAUL CARTER and danger at high speed is his second name. Paul Carter is still the funniest man in the bar and the nicest 'alpha male' you'll ever meet as he risks all for the sake of a cracking yarn.

      Ride Like Hell and You'll Get There
    • The outrageous sequel to Don't Tell Mum I Work on the Rigs (She Thinks I m a Piano Player in a Whorehouse) brings more great stories from the far side of civilization - hilarious, full of humour, colourful characters and dramatic action! In his inimitable style Paul Carter regales us with his colourful adventures from the front line of thee oil industry and the far side of civilization!

      This Is Not A Drill
    • Is that Bike Diesel, Mate?

      • 266pages
      • 10 heures de lecture
      3,8(30)Évaluer

      "At forty years old, a successful writer, husband and father, no longer toiling on offshore drilling rigs, was Paul Carter happily nestled in the cotton wool of suburban life enjoying the fruits of his labour? Was he f**k! With his manic life left far behind and the perfect opportunity to take it easy stretched before him what else would a middle-aged, bike obsessed, man want? Yes, that's right, he'd want to be the first guy to ride around Australia on an underpowered experimental motorcycle that runs on used chip fat, wouldn't he? (Preferably without getting hit by an articulated lorry full of bridge parts along the way - ) Is he out of his mind? Quite possibly - Embark on a rollickingly funny, downright dangerous and often unhinged quest that starts on an environmentally friendly motorcycle built on a shoestring budget by students, and ends with a plan to land speed record for biofuel-powered motorcycle. Carter is at his balls-to-the-wall best: prepare to laugh out loud"--Publisher's description.

      Is that Bike Diesel, Mate?
    • A take-no-prisoners approach to life has seen Paul Carter heading to some of the world's most remote, wild and dangerous places as a contractor in the oil business. Amazingly, he's survived (so far) to tell these stories from the edge of civilization. He has been shot at, hijacked and held hostage; almost died of dysentery in Asia and toothache in Russia; watched a Texan lose his mind in the jungles of Asia; lost a lot of money backing a scorpion against a mouse in a fight to the death, and been served cocktails by an orangutan on an ocean freighter. And that's just his day job. Taking postings in some of the world's wildest and most remote regions, not to mention some of the roughest rigs on the planet, Paul has worked, got into trouble, and been given serious talkings to, in locations as far-flung as the North Sea, Middle East, Borneo and Tunisia, as exotic as Sumatra, Vietnam and Thailand, and as flat-out dangerous as Columbia, Nigeria and Russia, with some of the maddest, baddest and strangest people you could ever hope not to meet.

      Don't Tell Mum I Work on the Rigs
    • The story follows Paul Carter, a successful writer and family man, as he embarks on a wild and perilous adventure to become the first person to circumnavigate Australia on an experimental motorcycle powered by used cooking oil. This quest challenges his limits and explores themes of ambition, risk, and the pursuit of happiness, revealing the unpredictable nature of such a daring endeavor.

      Is That Thing Diesel?: One Man, One Bike and the First Lap Around Australia on Used Cooking Oil
    • Behind Palace Doors

      • 272pages
      • 10 heures de lecture
      3,4(25)Évaluer

      Reminiscences of the Queen Mother and her life during a two-year stint, 1994-1996 as by an officer of the Irish Guards who was an equerry in her household.

      Behind Palace Doors
    • Parrot

      • 213pages
      • 8 heures de lecture
      3,2(19)Évaluer

      Highly illustrated, with images drawn from a wide range of cultures, historical periods and media, this book offers a roller-coaster ride through parrots in literature, jokes, folklore, mythology, film, TV and children's stories worldwide, as well as an examination of parrot conservation, talking bird experiments and parrot portraiture.

      Parrot