Met een indrukwekkende serie kleurenfoto's van een aantal van de indrukwekkendste landschappen ter wereld, waaronder lucht- en satellietfoto's, en met ontelbare gedetailleerde regionale kaarten is Geologica een nuttige bron voor studenten en een ideaal naslagwerk voor de thuisbibliotheek.
My name's Robert Coenraads and I'm holding a rock in my hand. That's because as well as being an author I'm also a geologist. I'm deeply interested in the our planet Earth, its fiery birth some 4,600 million years ago, and the evolution of its rich variety of life that exists today.
When I'm not writing books, I work in mineral exploration, searching the planet for exotic metals, precious gemstones and ornamental rocks like the piece of gem turquoise I have in my hand.
My great passion for writing blossomed since discovering the great joy of distilling humankind's vast reservoirs of knowledge and spiritual truths for others to enjoy and benefit from.
Over the years, I've been invited to write, contribute to, or consult on quite a number of books — grand 'coffee table style' publications packed with world-class photographs, mostly titles to do with the natural sciences such as Rocks & Fossils, Geologica, Natural Disasters and Extreme Earth because that is my area of expertise.
I especially enjoy my own personal creative writing — novels on themes which enable me to explore the intricacies of human relationships and potential.
I am also founding president of FreeSchools World Literacy in Australia, an organisation dedicated to the education of underprivileged children as I believe a good education is key to solving all of the world's problems. This is such a strong belief of mine that it can't help but reflect in my writing.
I have enjoyed reading snippets of this over the past ten years. It’s too long to read as one would a novel, but it was very well presented and written. Geology is a huge interest of mine, and I have read lots of non-fiction ones like this prior to joining Goodreads. I was clearing out my TBR books and came across this one as mostly read.
It certainly has been time for someone to come along and exploit what progress photography has made in the last half century for such a book. Here are assembled really good, sharp images, often taken from the air, of well-selected, meaningful geologic structures. Many of the views are grossly unusual and at the same time, so coherently impressive to the eye that each of them opens the door to an own universe. Earth is thus revealed as a planet with a downright incredible multitude of landscape types.