Peter Macinnis
Goodreads Author
Born
in Australia
Website
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Influences
Alistair Cooke, Peter Mason, Henry Lawson, Peter Medawar, J B S Haldan
...more
Member Since
March 2008
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Poisons: From Hemlock to Botox to the Killer Bean of Calabar
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published
2004
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17 editions
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Bittersweet: The Story of Sugar
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published
2002
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11 editions
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Mr Darwin's Incredible Shrinking World: science and technology in 1859
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published
2008
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4 editions
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Kokoda Track: 101 Days
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published
2007
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4 editions
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The Big Book of Australian History
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published
2013
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3 editions
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Australian Backyard Explorer
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published
2009
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3 editions
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100 Discoveries: The Greatest Breakthroughs In History
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published
2008
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5 editions
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Not Your Usual Bushrangers
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published
2015
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3 editions
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Not Your Usual Treatments: how medicine got better (Not Your Usual... Book 4)
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Rockets: Sulfur, Sputnik and Scramjets
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published
2003
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6 editions
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| This is the author, so no rating is offered. Look, this one was written to go on a tablet or phone, and that format is cheaper, weighs less and causes less harm to the planet than a dead tree book. This new version is thoroughly revised, and augmente ...more | |
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| This is the author, so no rating is offered. This collection got its start when I was writing content for an online encyclopaedia, and about twice a week, a teacher-librarian would ask plaintively for the text of some half-remembered poem, and becaus ...more | |
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| This is the author, so no rating is offered. Look, this one was written to go on a tablet or phone, and that format is cheaper, weighs less and causes less harm to the planet than a dead tree book. I spend a lot of time on Sydney's North Head, helpin ...more | |
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Peter Macinnis
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| This is the author, so no rating is offered. Look, this one was written to go on a tablet or phone, and that format is cheaper, weighs less and causes less harm to the planet than a dead tree book. I spend a lot of time on Sydney's North Head, helpin ...more | |
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Peter Macinnis
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The Nature of North Head in colour: a naturalist’s guide and companion
by Peter Macinnis (Goodreads Author) |
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“There is a remarkably distinctive smell emitted by fearful bureaucrats. It is acrid, rank, and seems to cling to the clothing and the hair. Acting like a pheromone, it drives senior management to form small defensive herds from which to scream homicidally at middle management that they must not tell junior staff who can fix the problem what is going on because everything, including what has just been reported on the radio, is secret.”
― Poisons: From Hemlock to Botox and the Killer Bean of Calabar
― Poisons: From Hemlock to Botox and the Killer Bean of Calabar
“There is a remarkably distinctive smell emitted by fearful bureaucrats. It is acrid, rank, and seems to cling to the clothing and the hair.”
― The Killer Bean of Calabar and Other Stories
― The Killer Bean of Calabar and Other Stories
Topics Mentioning This Author
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The History Book ...:
ARCHIVE TWO: PLEASE INTRODUCE YOURSELF ~
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“The writer found that certain freshwater crustaceans, namely Californian species of Daphnia, copepods, and Gammarus when indifferent to light can be made intensely positively heliotropic by adding some acid to the fresh water, especially the weak acid CO2. When carbonated water (or beer) to the extent of about 5 c.c. or 10 c.c. is slowly and carefully added to 50 c.c. of fresh water containing these Daphnia, the animals will become intensely positive and will collect in a dense cluster on the window side of the dish. Stronger acids act in the same way but the animals are likely to die quickly. . . Alcohols act in the same way. In the case of Gammarus the positive heliotropism lasts only a few seconds, while in Daphnia it lasts from 10 to 50 minutes and can be renewed by the further careful addition of some CO2.”
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“In the circle where I was raised, I knew of no one knowledgeable in the visual arts, no one who regularly attended musical performances, and only two adults other than my teachers who spoke without embarrassment of poetry and literature — both of these being women. As far as I can recall, I never heard a man refer to a good or a great book. I knew no one who had mastered, or even studied, another language from choice. And our articulate, conscious life proceeded without acknowledgement of the preceding civilisations which had produced it.”
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“Science is part of culture. Culture isn't only art and music and literature, it's also understanding what the world is made of and how it functions. People should know something about stars, matter and chemistry. People often say that they don't like chemistry but we deal with chemistry all the time. People don't know what heat is, they hardly know what water is. I'm always surprised how little people know about anything. I'm puzzled by it.”
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“The division of our culture is making us more obtuse than we need be: we can repair communications to some extent: but, as I have said before, we are not going to turn out men and women who understand as much of their world as Piero della Francesca did of his, or Pascal, or Goethe. With good fortune, however, we can educate a large proportion of our better minds so that they are not ignorant of the imaginative experience, both in the arts and in science, nor ignorant either of the endowments of applied science, of the remediable suffering of most of their fellow humans, and of the responsibilities which, once seen, cannot be denied.”
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“At one time, the state of culture in Czechoslovakia was described, rather poignantly, as a 'Biafra of the spirit'. . . I simply do not believe that we have all lain down and died. I see far more than graves and tombstones around me. I see evidence of this in . . . expensive books on astronomy printed in a hundred thousand copies (they would hardly find that many readers in the USA) . . .”
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