In Search of Hobart

Front Cover
New South, 2009 - Travel - 278 pages
In this updated edition, Peter Timms leads us on a journey through his adopted city of Hobart, Australias smallest, most southerly, least prosperous, but arguably most beautiful state capital. He reveals a city in transition, shaking off its dark and troubled past to claim its special place in the post-modern world: going boutique, nice and slow, as one overseas visitor notes. From Hobarts convict legacy, its spectacular natural setting, heritage architecture and climate, to crime rates, economic hardship, the recent disfigurements of the developers, and the opening of MONA (the Museum of Old and New Art) Hobart's newest tourist attraction. Timms brings a wealth of fresh insights. He explores the city with a mixture of affection, admiration, frustration and sadness, interviewing a wide range of residents along the way. Those who have experienced Hobart as tourists will be surprised and intrigued by the lively, complex society this book reveals. Those who live here will surely discover their city anew.

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About the author (2009)

\Peter Timms is a freelance writer, a former editor of Art Monthly Australia, and a former art critic for the Age. He is the author of several books, including Making Nature: Six Walks in the Bush, Private Lives: Australians at Home Since Federation, and What's Wrong with Contemporary Art. He lives in Hobart, Tasmania. Robert Dessaix is the award-winning author of A Mother's DisgraceNight Letters, and Twilight of Love: Travels with Turgenev.

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