Tim Bonyhady is one of Australia's foremost environmental and cultural historians. His many books include Images in Opposition: Australian Landscape Painting 1801-1890, Burke and Wills: From Melbourne to Myth, Places Worth Keeping: Conservationists, Politics and Law, the award winning The Colonial Earth and The Enchantment of the Long-haired Rat.
'Bonyhady crafts his history through a forensic analysis of detailed sources' * ABR on The Enchantment of the Long-haired Rat * '[A]s Bonyhady's highly engaging new book eloquently demonstrates, the rat and its history offer a fascinating lens through which to examine the history of the Australian environment and the catastrophic human and environmental impact of European invasion...[a] fascinating and often profound book' * Sydney Morning Herald on The Enchantment of the Long-haired Rat * 'This book is environmental history writing at its best' * Historical Records of Australian Science on The Enchantment of the Long-haired Rat * 'Barbarism and textiles, miniskirts and chadaris. Historian Tim Bonyhady has fashioned these and countless other ingredients into an intriguing account of Afghanistan's fiendishly complex cultural and political wars in which a leader's choice of hat relays coded messages, and a photograph can be every bit as dangerous as a landmine.' * Christopher Kremmer * 'Fascinating...the whole book reminds us of the pervasive instincts of bigotry, oppression and violence that have repeatedly frustrated reforms, including those of the communists which provoked civil war.' * Australian * 'This is an impressive work of scholarship; [Bonyhady] seems to know everything about the visual history of Afghanistan.' * ArtsHub * 'By looking through clothes, carpets and the camera (his subtitle), Bonyhady brings a lens to Afghanistan, sometimes wide-angled, often intensely individualising...In a world dominated by images, we will need books like this to help us unpack their meaning, to arm us against their seductions, and perhaps prompt rejoicing when they embody integrity and hope.' * Australian Book Review * 'Bonyhady offers detailed insights into a poorly understood country that is far more complex than generally appreciated.' * Good Reading *