Boom: The Underground History of Australia, from Gold Rush to GFC
By (Author) Malcolm Knox
Penguin Random House Australia
Viking Australia
21st August 2013
Australia
General
Non Fiction
Australasian and Pacific history
Extractive industries
338.20
Paperback
416
Width 152mm, Height 230mm, Spine 31mm
532g
Mining divides the country - development against conservation, north-and-west against south-and-east, pro-tax against anti-tax. It's an important industry, but why do passions run so high What does mining really mean to us And how much do we understand about our underground history Although we favour the romantic vision of Australia riding to prosperity on the sheep's back, in reality we have always owed as much to the shovel. The gold rush kick-started the nation, populating our cities and building our regional centres, and our fortunes have both risen and fallen according to what we've been able to dig from the ground. To describe mining's place in the Australian story, Boom presents not a textbook history, but a narrative of the people behind the facts and figures, from the eccentric loners who staked the first claims to the emergence of the modern mega-magnates. It takes us deep underground with men working in extraordinary danger by candlelight, and on the extraordinary journey 25,000 tonnes of the raw Australian landscape makes from the Pilbara to Shanghai. Boom reveals the history of mining as the Australian story, for better or worse. Insightful, compellingly readable and full of extraordinary characters, it shows how mining and miners have shaped our history and gripped our imagination through boom and bust.
Malcolm Knox's novels include The Life and the Ned Kelly Award-winning A Private Man, and his many non-fiction titles include The Greatest: The Players, the Moments, the Matches 1993-2008 and The Captains: The Story Behind Australia's Second Most Important Job.