Reddit Reddit reviews The Fatal Shore: The Epic of Australia's Founding

We found 8 Reddit comments about The Fatal Shore: The Epic of Australia's Founding. Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.

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The Fatal Shore: The Epic of Australia's Founding
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8 Reddit comments about The Fatal Shore: The Epic of Australia's Founding:

u/Nagsheadlocal · 20 pointsr/history

If you are looking specifically at the history of the penal colonies, try Robert Hughes' The Fatal Shore. I read it some time ago and enjoyed it quite a bit.

N.B. Hughes is an Aussie and no fan of the British.

u/[deleted] · 7 pointsr/australia

The Fatal Shore by Robert Hughes.

u/grond · 5 pointsr/AskHistorians

You could also read 'The Fatal Shore'. Fair warning: it can be pretty gruesome and disturbing.

http://www.amazon.com/Fatal-Shore-Epic-Australias-Founding/dp/0394753666/

u/sharer_too · 2 pointsr/booksuggestions

I haven't read a lot on the subject, but I loved [The Fatal Shore] (http://www.amazon.com/The-Fatal-Shore-Australias-Founding/dp/0394753666) by Robert Hughes. It's long and involved, but well-written.

If you'd consider historical fiction, [Against The Wind] (http://books.google.com/books/about/Against_the_Wind.html?id=NyZCmwEACAAJ), by Bronwyn Binns and Ian Jones is based on the story of an ancestor of hers. It's a great story and a quick read (the mini-series from 1979 still has fans all over the world). I think it's out of print, though.

u/vimandvinegar · 2 pointsr/history
u/gracebatmonkey · 1 pointr/IAmA

Oh, no, no, no. I recommend to you a close read of The Fatal Shore, by Robert Hughes, which will get you better understanding of how it wasn't ever a "nation of inmates", as you say.

That won't cover the period where the world was falling in love with Australia, though, and it flirted closely with being the best of all of the other Big Experiments up into the '90s (with some extremely notable and regrettable exceptions). I don't know what reading to recommend for that, unfortunately.

u/ChopsNZ · 0 pointsr/todayilearned

After WW2 the Greeks chartered planes to send young teens out to Oz as 'domestic servants'. You can imagine how well that went for them.

Australia has an appalling history of human right abuses and while I love my Aussie family members none of them have a damn fucking clue about anything.

This is an excellent book if anyone gives a damn
https://www.amazon.com/Fatal-Shore-Epic-Australias-Founding/dp/0394753666

u/walkswithwolfies · 0 pointsr/worldnews

The first small convict flotilla of 11 ships found its way into Sydney Harbor in the humid summer (January in those parts) of 1788. America had had an oblique hand both in this first tenuous settlement and in the development of all the other vast Australian outdoor gulags. For the American colonies, which had once taken Britain's prisoners, often assigning them to farmers along the Eastern seaboard, were now independent and refused to receive Britain's exported criminality.

You can read about Australia's beginnings as a penal colony and the effects that that had on the development of the country here:

[The Fatal Shore] (https://www.amazon.com/Fatal-Shore-Epic-Australias-Founding/dp/0394753666)