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Women's Fiction
Cold Beer and Crocodiles: A Bicycle Journey into Australia

Cold Beer and Crocodiles: A Bicycle Journey into Australia

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Takes you there!
Review: ...but I wouldn't have wanted to have been there with him. The author does an exceptional job writing up the landscapes, his experiences and thoughts. I was captive. I didn't want this book to end.
As other reviewers have stated, the only flaw is that we would have wanted more detail, more information. If ever there is a second edition, I will be among the first to buy the book. I would love to take the trip again, looking for more details in every encounter and circumstance. I highly recommend reading about this painful, enjoyable, amazing journey.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An intriguing account of one man's journey around Australia.
Review: A captivating story. I first read of Roff's adventure in his three separate articles for the National Geographic in 1999. I thought at that time how wonderful it would be for the author to write a book about his cycling tour around the continent of Australia. You can imagine how surprised I was to discover his recently published book. This book is very entertaining. Roff has a great sense of humor and he demonstrated a willingness to reach out and befriend all sorts of people along his journey which really inspired me to become more aware and accepting of the people I meet. The author's use of Australian phrases and his detailed descriptions of his personal experiences, landscapes, cities, towns, and the people who inhabit them makes the book hard to put down.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Duel in the Sun.
Review: Cold Beer and Crocodiles (crocodiles barely feature at all!) is an excellent travel adventure which will appeal to anyone who cosily enjoys the vicarious experience of someone else battling to survive in an extreme landscape : in this case, the Australian Outback. Having lived in Australia for 15 years without developing any emotional attachment to the country, Roff Smith quit his job at Time magazine to undertake a mammoth 10,000 mile round trip of Australia, his rationale being a desire to try to engage emotionally "with the country I'd lived in as a stranger all these years". His chosen mode of transport, a 21 speed touring bicycle would let him get close to the land, experience Australia, its sights, sounds and smells.

In the early stages, Smith expends much pedal power shaking off the Sydney suburbs and running the gauntlet of heavy, aggressive traffic. City and suburbs sloughed off, six months of gruelling Outback travel follow : its when he hits the furnace of the Outback that the words blaze off the page as he is plagued for months on end by flies, thirst, dust, scorching heat and feelings of loneliness ; is overtaken by huge triple roadtrains barrelling down desert highways ; witnesses spectacular thunder and lightning desert storms ; bivouacs in scrub under night skies "full of stars as sharp as needles"; works in sheep and cattle stations; picks melons ; visits an Aboriginal Community; duels for weeks on end with the vast, hostile expanses of empty reddish plains baking under the blistering sun - "so much nothing out there...just miles and miles of nothing" .Surviving to the next roadhouse is the order of each day! On his travels, Smith encounters a mixed bag of people ( a few dodgy, most helpful) often in remote roadhouses, isolated settlements or outstations hundreds of miles of sand, scrub and spinifex away from the nearest town.

If the thought of living on the edge appeals to you, read this book. Now try "One For The Road" by Tony Horwitz, another equally good travel venture into the Australian Outback but this time from the very different perspective of a hitch-hiker. Both books strongly recommended!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: True to the cycle touring experience
Review: Having finished only half the book, I'm amazed at the experiences he has. I'm at a loss to understand just how he went about getting into the situations he did. And yet, being a cycle-tourist myself, I can understand.

Let me explain a bit. While Smith was riding inland, in central Queensland, he decided he wanted to visit a sheep station (ranch) and see how it operated. Somehow he got in contact with the MacIntoshes of Fairfield Station. He stayed for days, helping out on the ranch.

Later, while pedaling through hot plains of Northern Queensland in the dry season, a couple of guys pulled up behind him in a Land Rover and offered him a beer. They got to talking, and again Smith spent days with newfound friends in the outback. They camped, fished, and in the end Smith was invited to a wedding.

And time after time, the author was invited to stay over for dinner or to sleep in the spare bedroom at various homes along the way.

During my everyday comings and goings, it's hard to imagine that one could so easily make new friends and have such adventures. People are not so trusting, so willing to share their lives. I thought to myself, this isn't the way things work. And then I remembered what it was like to pedal from Phoenix, Arizona to El Paso, Texas. And then Smith's adventure seemed plausible - even made sense.

While on a bike ride through the Southwestern US, a friend and I experienced quite a few gestures of goodwill. A woman drove twenty miles to offer us a ride when several spokes snapped. A man opened his home to me and offered up his computer, refrigerator, and even his shower. Three families on holiday in the mountains shared their meal with us and were more than willing to give us a ride down the mountain to a New Year's party the community was putting on at the community center.

When I think back, people are anxious to share and offer a helping hand, sometimes. But why isn't every day life like this?

Perhaps it's something to do with being a cyclist on the road. Maybe it's because being a cyclist in the middle of a desert is a good icebreaker. Or perhaps people feel inclined to help someone so vulnerable to the elements. Or maybe they're just curious.

Whatever the case, I both identify with Smith's experiences and am baffled by them. It's a book I can hardly put down.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Talent Down Under
Review: I came across Roff Smith's tale while reading National Geographic at work and bought his book from amazon.com that night. I had just begun planning for my own bicycle trip across the USA and was facinated by the topic. Roff Wrote exactly what I needed to read. When I finally took my trip this summer all I wanted was to recreate the trip I had read in his journal.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Great tale of adventure and endurance
Review: I really enjoyed Cold Beer and Crocodiles for the inside look it gave me of Australia's less-traveled regions. Roff Smith experienced all of it pretty intimately, the blazing heat, bugs and bad tempers--though most of those he met were very kind. He met lots of interesting people and took time off from his ride to stay with them and experience their lives.

In every scenerio where he interacted with people, however, I longed for even more information. A deeper look into those lives. Even when he experienced downright meanness on the road, I wanted those stories to go on longer; I wanted him to offer more of what was going through his head, more of what those people said.

Also, he breezed over long sections of his ride and left me wondering what had happened in the 5 days he didn't mention. I know he couldn't tell us about every day--especially if nothing at all happened, but I still wish there was more. That's not to say the book is bland or empty. It's very interesting; captivating, even. I learned quite a lot about Australia and my respect for Roff for undertaking this journey is great. I would definitely recommend reading this book.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Buy if you liked Blue Highways, avoid if you prefer Bryson
Review: If I could summarize this book in one sentence, it would be 'Blue Highways in Australia on a Bicycle.' Roff Smith's writing style and general outlook on people and the road is very similar to William Least Heat-Moon's classic novel, Blue Highways, and as such if you liked that book, you'll enjoy this one.

The book is more of a 'describe the interesting people I met and places I visited on my spiritual journey' travelogue book than it is a humor book; in fact, it's rarely funny. If you're looking for something similar to Bryon's In a Sunburned Country, you'll likely be disappointed, and I recommend that book or Tony Horowitz's One for the Road instead.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Not bad
Review: It was a pretty good read actually.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Traveling with all the chunder left in.
Review: Roff first covered his trip around Australia in a three part series in National Geographic a few years ago. It was a find to discover he had written an entire book on his journey since cycling around a country roughly the size of the United States should produce more material than just three magazine articles. It's not quite the same prose either, so if you did read these articles, you're not reading a reprint.

"Cold Beer and Crocodiles" is a poor title, especially when Smith's account proves there is so much more to Australia than the two. He does an excellent job of describing the different climates he rides and lives through.

Just as skillful is his portrayal of the various Australians he meets along the way. I spent several months in the country a few years ago, so I can relate to their overwhelming hospitality and generosity (most). As few truly unfriendly and hostile Australians as I met, I'm glad Smith wasn't afraid to mention the few he came across. They're such a small minority, especially if you consider a similar trip made around say the US. A small number would be so open to a strange cycling by their homes. Traditionally, Australians are used to strangers traveling through covering the vast distances in search of work. Even so I think Smith fortunate to get a rare glimpse (for the rest of the world anyway) into an outback station, several, and we're lucky to read about his other experiences. His balance between the positive and negative provides a wonderful narrative of his trip. I agree with other reviewers the book winds up extremely quickly, and he skips through and by several places worth commenting on. He barely writes about this trip in Tasmania. But this isn't the Rough Guide to Australia. What is mentioned and left out is entirely up to the writer. There are several other books on travel in Australia, such as Bryson's "In a Sunburned Country" to give a different spin on Oz.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A Great Journey
Review: Roff Smith hit a crossroads one day and didn't know whether he should stay in Australia or move back to the US. Since he hadn't really seen or experienced Australia like he felt he should have, how could he be expected to make a decision as to whether he should stay? The only solution, of course, was to hop on his bicycle and pedal 10,000 miles around the entire island.

Along the way he meets up with the requisite cast of weird characters, tries as much Australian outback life as he can handle, and just plain experiences Australia. He writes about his struggles, emotional and physical, to actually complete the trip. But whether it's bad luck, hurt legs, a chance encounter with a tcomplete jerk, all his setbacks are rendered unimportant when he gets a chance to see the things that make Australia what it is. It's a great book.

The only valid complaint I can voice has already been said by most of the other reviewers: the book is too short. The author spends the first half of the book going about one-third of his trip. The last half of his trip occupies barely the last quarter of the book. The addition of another 100 pages wouldn't make this book too long or unreadable; it would only serve to fully flesh it out.

Perhaps one other disadvantage is that the book may inspire you to want to take a bicycle journey of your own! Hmmm, I know that Australia's been done ... has anyone pedalled all around New Zealand?


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