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Chiang Kai-shek
Hollington K. Tong
Taipei: China Publishing Company, 1953.The revised edition of Tong’s biography of the Chinese leader. Tong was a journalist and diplomat, serving as the Ambassador of the Republic of China to Japan when this edition was published later as the Ambassador to the United States. This revised edition, published 16 years after the first edition, condenses the story of Chiang Kai-shek’s life pre-1936, which was covered at length in the two volume first edition, and focuses on the epic years which followed, 1937-1953. This copy inscribed by Tong in Tokyo, 1953, to the polyglot Boris Strjeshevsky, an officer in the Imperial Russian Army that fled to China where he learned English and Chinese and taught Russian to the Chinese, before moving to Japan in 1939 where he learned Japanese and taught languages, before finally moving to Queensland, Australia, where he taught Russian at the University of Queensland.
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An Infamous Army
Georgette Heyer
Melbourne: William Heinemann, 1953.Regency romance.
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Deadly Diamond
Joan Storm
London: Hammond, Hammond & Company, 1953.A Cloak and Dagger Mystery. A continental honeymoon is interrupted by a murder when the husband, a member of British Intelligence, assists the local police with the investigation.
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An Account of the Mine and Works of Mount Morgan Limited at Mount Morgan
Mount Morgan Limited
Brisbane: Jackson & O’Sullivan, 1953.Includes a folding plate showing an aerial view of surface plant and open cut.
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Quatrefoil
James Barr
London: Vision Press, 1953.First UK edition of one of the first modern books to portray homosexual characters positively written by James Fugate, under the pseudonym James Barr.
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My Descent from Soapbox to Senate
Senator Gordon Brown
Brisbane: Co-operative Press, 1953.Gordon Brown was a remarkable Australian political agitator, who by his own admission had no time for “the dominating and dictatorial do-littles who claim superiority over the working plugs.” Having stood up for those “working plugs” his whole life, it was only reluctantly that Brown was convinced to write an autobiography. But, filled as it is with honest and unapologetic lessons on what Australia needed, then and now, he wrote an Australian political biography that is also a true national classic.