Melbourne & Victoria

by Anthony Ham

Published 30 September 2019
Victoria offers almost all Australian landscapes that you can experience without having to travel great distances--sandy beaches, gorges, the metropolis of Melbourne, outback, subtropical primeval forests and alpine high mountain landscapes. Discover in more than 340 images Victoria's beauty and unique diversity.

Australia

by Anthony Ham and Donna Wheeler

Published 29 October 2018
Australia, situated between the Indian and Pacific Oceans, is rich in rainforest, deserts, and mountains. Geological wonders such as the Uluru, the Outback or the Great Barrier Reef characterize the country, as do the coastline of dream beaches and surfing paradises with offshore islands. This book shows in more than 500 pictures the uniqueness of the animal world above and under water along with the untouched nature and the cultural sides of the metropolises like Sydney, Melbourne, Perth, and Canberra.

Sydney & New South Wales

by Donna Wheeler

Published 1 January 2020
New South Wales is one of Australia's most diverse states: dense rainforests, unique beaches such as Bondi Beach or Tallow Beach but also ski resorts in the Australian Alps and the bustling metropolis of Sydney. The book shows in over 340 photographs the unique beauty of the region.

Deserts of the World

by Susanne Mack and Anthony Ham

Published 1 July 2019
Imagine a sea of sand dunes the size of a European country, a world in motion, exquisite ridge lines perfectly sculpted by the winds and stretching to a layered horizon. Or a remote mountain massif in black rock or sandstone, hewn by the elements and marked in red ochre with the passage of ancient rock artists. Or a salt pan shimmering to a seemingly endless horizon. Welcome to the world's deserts, a realm of astonishing and dramatic beauty, as much places of the soul and the imagination as actual physical terrain.

Queensland is a vast land of diverse and unrelenting beauty: from the rainforest-covered mountains, unique islands such as the Whitsunday Islands and Fraser Island to the undeveloped deserts of the outback. And of course the largest contiguous coral reef in the world, the Great Barrier Reef. In more than 340 photographs the fascination of this unique area is clearly presented.