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Girt

The Unauthorised History of Australia

Audiobook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available

In this hilarious history, David Hunt tells the real story of Australia's past from megafauna to Macquarie ... the cock-ups and curiosities, the forgotten eccentrics and Eureka moments that have made us who we are.

Mark Twain wrote of Australian history: 'It does not read like history, but like the most beautiful lies ... but they are all true, they all happened.' In Girt, Hunt uncovers these beautiful lies, recounting the strange and ridiculous episodes that conventional histories ignore. The result is surprising, enlightening—and side-splittingly funny.

Girt explains the role of the coconut in Australia's only military coup, the Dutch obsession with nailing perfectly good kitchenware to posts, and the settlers' fear of Pemulwuy and his Amazing Technicolor Dreamingcoat.

It introduces us to forgotten heroes like Mary McLoghlin, transported for the typically Irish crime of 'felony of sock'; Patyegarang, the young Eora girl who co-authored the world's most surprising dictionary; and Trim the cat, who beat a French monkey to become the first animal to circumnavigate Australia.

Our nation's beginnings were steeped in the unlikely, the incongruous and the frankly bizarre. Girt restores these stories to their rightful place. Not to read it would be un-Australian.

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    • Books+Publishing

      April 5, 2013
      Australian history never looked like this! Historian David Hunt takes aim at some of Australia’s historical sacred cows with his unique brand of irreverent and often profane humour. Cook, Philip and Macquarie all get a working over. Dampier, for example, is described as ‘a sensitive pirate with soulful eyes and girly hair’. Francis Grose, the second man to run New South Wales, was ‘lazy and corpulent, with stunned-fish eyes and a prodigious double chin’. While Hunt lays it on a little too thick at times, the result is often very funny. Beneath the humour is an interesting analysis backed by extensive research, which has uprooted some little-known historical gems. But as in all the best satire, you’re never quite sure where the facts end and the jokes begin. Girt will appeal to readers who enjoyed John Birmingham’s Leviathan as much as lovers of Chaser-style satire and the humour of John Clarke. Hunt’s narrative ends with Lachlan Macquarie back in Britain awaiting the judgement of posterity, and leaves this reader hoping there will be further instalments.

      Dave Martus is the manager of Dymocks Neutral Bay in Sydney

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  • English

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