Bolinda Home Page

Login

Basket totals

Items:
0
Total:
AUD$ 0.00
Amanda Brown

Narrator

Amanda Brown

Amanda Brown is an Australian composer, classically trained musician, singer and songwriter. She is known for her role as the violinist of the cherished Australian independent band The Go-Betweens and more recently a session musician and soundtrack composer. Amanda has recorded and performed as a session musician with artists including REM, Silverchair, The Vines, Youth Group, Josh Pyke, The Church, David Bridie, The Apartments and Toni Collette.

Search Results

You searched for 'Amanda Brown'. 2 results were found.
To add items to your order, enter quantity and click 'add selected products to order'
Title:
Travelling Light (MP3)
Written by:
Robyn Davidson 
Read by:
Amanda Brown 
Format:
Unabridged MP3 CD Audio Book 
Number of CDs:
Duration:
5 hours 23 minutes 
MP3 size:
234 MB 
Published:
January 28 2019 
Available Date:
January 28 2019 
Age Category:
Adult 
ISBN:
9781489482679 
Genres:
Non-fiction; Australia; Australian; Lifestyle - Travel; Memoirs 
Publisher:
Bolinda audio 
Qty
Format
Price
Bolinda price
AUD$ 29.95
AUD$ 29.95
 

From the international bestselling author of tracks comes a collection of articles on the experiences as an unencumbered traveller in many parts of the world.

It'd been a long time since I claimed some solitude in this blessed landscape; since I've done without life's little props. Here I have no friend, no dog, no radio, no clock, no phone, no roof, no body pollutants. The clackety-clack of the typewriter travels out into the valley and gets lost in expanses of forest and paperbark swamp. I'm the only soul around. For ten years Robyn Davidson has been travelling light. Across the desert, across America on a Harley-Davidson, or walking through the bush of ghosts by night. In these articles that make up Travelling Light, the bestselling author of Tracks takes us into wilds of many countries – as well as countries of the mind.

'A born writer.'
The Daily Telegraph

'A perceptive and sensitive observer.'
The Sydney Morning Herald