Jason Koivu's Reviews > In a Sunburned Country
In a Sunburned Country
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I love Bill Bryson. Yep, it's a full-blown, one-sided bromance. Bryson could write a book about the history of the individual rooms within the typical house and I would love it (he did and I did)! So, when I discovered he'd written about his experiences while traveling Australia, I knew I'd found my next good read!
In a Sunburned Country takes in the Land Down-Under, from today traveling all the way back to its earliest historical findings. You expect and get a look at modern Australia, its UK-convict days, Sydney and other cities, the bush, the outback, and the plight, trials and importance of the aborigines.
All of the above also comes with a healthy dose of Bryson humor. It's self-deprecating, it's consciously delusional for comedy's sake, it's honest and it gives me the chuckles. I appreciate that he puts himself in awkward situations and really enjoy his description of scenes in which he is a participating victim. Australia has countless ways to kill a person, what with all its deadly animals, so there's plenty of opportunity for hair-raising hilarity, especially considering Bryson's the sort of guy who could get himself savaged by a hedgehog.
Fun is fun and all, but in the end this book is about the knowledge, so if you have an interest in learning more about Australia, I couldn't recommend another book more highly. The author is a full-on philomath and he loves this country, so the reader is treated to a veritable love-fest spewed all over the pages of In a Sunburned Country!
In a Sunburned Country takes in the Land Down-Under, from today traveling all the way back to its earliest historical findings. You expect and get a look at modern Australia, its UK-convict days, Sydney and other cities, the bush, the outback, and the plight, trials and importance of the aborigines.
All of the above also comes with a healthy dose of Bryson humor. It's self-deprecating, it's consciously delusional for comedy's sake, it's honest and it gives me the chuckles. I appreciate that he puts himself in awkward situations and really enjoy his description of scenes in which he is a participating victim. Australia has countless ways to kill a person, what with all its deadly animals, so there's plenty of opportunity for hair-raising hilarity, especially considering Bryson's the sort of guy who could get himself savaged by a hedgehog.
Fun is fun and all, but in the end this book is about the knowledge, so if you have an interest in learning more about Australia, I couldn't recommend another book more highly. The author is a full-on philomath and he loves this country, so the reader is treated to a veritable love-fest spewed all over the pages of In a Sunburned Country!
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Reading Progress
July 2, 2015
– Shelved
May 5, 2016
–
Started Reading
May 11, 2016
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Finished Reading
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Howard
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rated it 5 stars
May 12, 2016 06:03AM

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I think it might be my favorite too, but that might be because it's my latest.

I've enjoyed the other four of his I've read for various reasons. This one brought a bunch of the reasons together into one really great read.

Nice! That's quite the compliment in its way.


What's the Bryson book you've read? I've read a couple others and have enjoyed them all.
I figure the 'numerous ways to kill you' issue you guys have with animals/insects over there is blown out of proportion, as in, you're probably not going to get yourself killed just by stepping outside of your house. However, compared to other countries/continents, you all have a ridiculously high number of things that could potentially kill, maim, cripple, debilitate, and generally ruin a person's day.

Have fun and try not to get killed by something awful!

Same here, Sandra!