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Tim Cahill

    6 décembre 1979

    Cet auteur se concentre sur les thèmes et les expériences de l'enfance et de l'adolescence. Son œuvre explore souvent des idées d'identité et de lieu, façonnées par les voyages et les influences culturelles. À travers son écriture, l'auteur partage souvent des aperçus sur la connexion humaine et la recherche d'appartenance.

    Road Fever
    Hold the Enlightenment
    Jaguars Ripped My Flesh
    Pass the Butterworms
    Everest : mountain without mercy
    Yellowstone and Grand Teton National Parks
    • Yellowstone and Grand Teton National Parks

      • 288pages
      • 11 heures de lecture
      4,0(23)Évaluer

      From geysers to grizzlies, bison to bald eagles, this guide introduces experts and novices alike to the wild and woolly wonders of both Yellowstone and Grand Teton National Parks, plus nearby attractions. Family-friendly travel tips are included, as well as outdoor activities.

      Yellowstone and Grand Teton National Parks
    • Pass the Butterworms

      Remote Journeys Oddly Rendered

      • 304pages
      • 11 heures de lecture
      4,0(942)Évaluer

      Exploring diverse cultures and landscapes, the author journeys through Mongolia's steppes, engages with descendants of Genghis Khan, and learns the "Mongolian death trot." He ventures to the North Pole for a daring swim and spends time with a head-hunting tribe in Irian Jaya New Guinea. Through humorous anecdotes and unique culinary experiences, such as sautéed sago beetle, he shares insights into family values among the Dani people and other intriguing aspects of these remote societies.

      Pass the Butterworms
    • Tim Cahill has clambered up Mount Roraima in the Guyana highlands, searching for the site of Arthur Conan Doyle's Lost World. He's dined on baked turtle lung in the desolate northeast of Australia and harvested poisonous sea snakes in the Philippines. He's watched a wrestling match between a shark and an "underwater zombie" during a horror movie shoot off the coast of Mexico. In this collection of adventure travel writing, Tim Cahill writes about these close encounters, giving new meaning to the expression "going to extremes". He also briefs us on gorilla etiquette, porcupine vendettas, and the loathsome fate awaiting those who disturb ruins in the jungles

      Jaguars Ripped My Flesh
    • Hold the Enlightenment

      • 377pages
      • 14 heures de lecture
      3,9(583)Évaluer

      "In 'HOLD THE ENLIGHTENMENT', one of America's favourite and funniest adventure writer returns with his most entertaining collection of essays yet as he travels the globe and faces down challenges that are animal, topographical - and human. 'HOLD THE ENLIGHTENMENT' takes Cahill to sites as far-flung as Saharan salt mines, the Congolese jungle, and Hanford, Washington, home of the largest toxic waste dump in the Western Hemisphere. With trademark wit and insight, Cahill describes stalking the legendary Caspian tiger in the mountains bordering Iraq, slogging through a pitch-black Australian Eucalyptus forest to find the nocturnal platypus, diving with great white sharks in South Africa, staving off enlightenment at a yoga retreat in Negril, Jamaica, and much, much more. In these essays, vivid and masterly storytelling combine with outrageously sly humour and jolts of real emotion to show one of the most popular journalists of our time at the peak of his game"

      Hold the Enlightenment
    • Tim Cahill reports on the road trip to end all road trips: a journey that took him from Tierra del Fuego to Prudhoe Bay, Alaska, in a record-breaking twenty three and a half days.

      Road Fever
    • In his latest tour of the earth's remote, exotic, and dismal places, the author of Road Fever and A Wolverine Is Eating My Leg sleeps with a grizzly bear, witnesses demonic possession in Bali, and survives a run-in with something called the Throne of Doom in Guatemala. Vivid and outrageously funny.

      Pecked to Death by Ducks
    • Not So Funny When It Happened

      • 224pages
      • 8 heures de lecture
      3,5(561)Évaluer

      A collection of travel essays, authors include Bill Bryson, Douglas Adams, Randy Wayne White, Dave Barry, Anne Lamott, Doug Lansky and many more.

      Not So Funny When It Happened
    • Man Eating Bugs

      The Art and Science of Eating Insects

      • 191pages
      • 7 heures de lecture

      Explores the consumption of spiders, crickets, grubs, scorpions, and dragonflies in thirteen different countries, including Australia, Japan, China, Venezuela, and the United States

      Man Eating Bugs
    • Tiny Timmy #8

      On Holiday

      • 128pages
      • 5 heures de lecture

      Its nearly time for school holidays, and Tiny Timmy just cant wait! Hes been planning on going to soccer camp, seeing his friends and playing every day! But then Dad tells the family theyre going away on an island holiday... It sounds like fun, but Timmys worried hell lose all his soccer skills! Can Timmy stay sharp while hes away? Find out in book 8 of the best-selling series from Socceroos legend, Tim Cahill!

      Tiny Timmy #8