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Books with author Ms Jude Binder

  • Sailors on Safari: Four J's Around the World Trilogy

    Jack Binder, Jude Binder

    language (Tujays Publishing, March 12, 2020)
    This trilogy is definitely not a travel guide. And itā€™s not just a tale of travelling the worldā€™s oceans and meeting people in faraway lands. Itā€™s a series showing how to live a life filled with adventure and survive. Trilogy comprising: Sailors on Safari + Danger Awaits the Unwary + Moai Magic HomeAfter sailing our vessel the equal of three times around the world, we set off from Australia an accomplished team of explorers searching for the unusual and inspirational.The Four Jā€™s ~ Jack, Judith, Jason, and Jerome had already lived ten years afloat, experiencing daily-life with a multitude of diverse societies. Always being the new family in the neighbourhood, we shared dinners, hosted sleepovers, swapped kids, and were invited to local events. To earn our keep during this decade of life afloat, we successfully completed internationally acclaimed amateur radio expeditions to mid-ocean ribbons of sand. A finely honed team at the peak of our sailing prowess, we set sail around the world on Voyages of Education seeking knowledge and adventure.In Book One ā€“ Sailors on Safari, we conquer the stormy Indian Ocean, nearly losing our ship and lives on a storm enraged Madagascar shore before arriving in strife-torn Tanzania. By good fortune, we survive to explore the slave island of Zanzibar and then land on our feet organising a four-wheel drive to explore magical East African game parks rich with Earthā€™s last collection of wild beasts. Seychelles next, finding Ol Joe, the Rarest Nut, before becoming entangled with Somalia fishermen, and nearly losing our mast. Then on to the Heart of Islam, encountering Red Sea gunships in a frightening middle of the night battle of wits.Includes excerpts from:Danger Awaits the Unwary ā€“ Book TWO of the FOUR Jā€™s Trilogy
  • Reflections 2020

    Jack Binder, Jude Binder

    (Tujays, June 9, 2020)
    Jack and Jude are an extraordinary couple who have worked side by side since exchanging vows more than fifty years ago. These sixteen short-stories explore the lives of these two explorers bonded by their love of adventure and knowledge, beginning with their African Honeymoon in 1969. Five months overland from England to South Africa in a derelict VW van, braving the beautiful and desolate Sahara, and escaping to a war-ravaged Nigeria followed by Simba Rebels in the Congo, nursing their worn-out vehicle until it collapses into a swayback pile of junk in East Africa! Oh My! Run the clock forward several decades and there are many more adventures from a couple who know how to stay together giving excellent advice to all wanting to achieve magnificent feats. Failed Again, a story highlighting our indomitable spirit of never giving up in a cute reminisce from childhood days. Running Scared is the frame by frame danger in our lives when undertaking expeditions to mid-ocean sand patches, which financed our lifestyle. Cannons boomed and frightened men dived for shelter in the South China Sea, a hotspot. Years later, on a black night approaching Madagascar, with our teenage sons on board, an error of judgement puts death within a heartbeat. The Dead Donā€™t Cry. Read the full book for a treat that can be spread lusciously over a few weeks, even if ravenous.
  • Reflections 2020

    Mr Jack Binder, Ms Jude Binder

    (Independently published, June 10, 2020)
    Jack and Jude are an extraordinary couple who have worked side by side since exchanging vows over fifty years ago. These sixteen short-stories explore the lives of two explorers deeply in love searching for adventure and knowledge, beginning with their African Honeymoon in 1969. Five months overland from England to South Africa in a derelict VW van, braving the beautiful and desolate Sahara, war-ravaged Nigeria and Congo, nursing their worn-out vehicle until it collapses into a swayback pile of junk. Having shared a tightly bound life for so many years, this couple knows how to stay together and they give excellent advice to all wanting to achieve magnificent feats. Failed Again highlights their indomitable spirit of never giving up in a cute reminisce from childhood days. Running Scared illustrates the danger in their lives when undertaking expeditions to mid-ocean sand patches that financed their lifestyle. Cannons boomed and frightened men dived for shelter in the South China Sea, a hotspot. On a black night in Madagascar, with their teenage sons on board, an error of judgement puts death within seconds, requiring rapid action in their most frightening experience. Retold with heart rendering anguish in The Dead Donā€™t Cry. Adding further dimensions to lives well lived is hard to believe stories from their mature years in the same vessel they home built in their youth. The Call of the Coral Sea, Sea Gypsies Once Again.Readersā€™ comments ~I love that it is raw, real, and the reflections are from all four of you. I love all the history of the places you have visitedā€¦ some I have never heard of. I have learnt so much history from this book.I love the descriptions of the geography; they make me feel like Iā€™m there in person. I love the passion for ā€˜mother earthā€™ that you have and the protective fear that we are losing this treasure with overpopulation and pollution. And I just love that you call Jude, my lady. That makes my heart melt.The way you combine personal anecdote with history and local politics creates vivid word portraits that stay in the mind. It adds depth to the experiences you describe and your interactions with the local populace. At Easter Island, you painted a vivid portrait of that mysterious, powerful, lost culture and then in a masterful stroke, aligned that well-known story of a lost civilization to the perils we face today. It brought the current situation into stark focus. One of my favourite paragraphs in this book. ā€œThe one truth is the wonder, majesty, and power of Earth and creation of life. Humans are unique for a reason, and itā€™s not to dominate but to find harmony and balance within the creation so we can become one with its secrets. Perhaps then weā€™ll attain the higher knowledge needed to understand the why? To reach universal nirvana, we need to tolerate each individualā€™s religious explanations and together worship Earth as tangible evidence of a force far more significant than our mortal souls. When we do that, weā€™ll understand the how and why.ā€