Ryan - I go in "spits & spurts" when it comes to reading. A lot of the books that I've ordered are pre-teen/young adult books and nowadays are literally an hour or two read (the "Dragon" ones - now that I've read them all and am familiar with them - can read in 30 minutes to an hour, but still LOVE the story lines! Especially that they were written about a REAL pony. LOVE the "blurb" at the end of the 2nd Dragon book - where it talks about the real "Dragon" competing at the POA "National Show" and how the original guy/breeder that brought him to the US was in the stands and sat up and took notice when a previously wild stallion was competed on and did some winning.). Sometimes, I will do that on a night when I can't get to sleep - it actually will help me to get to sleep as my mind falls into the subject/becomes one with the placement of the story. Also, they are good ones (several of them) for reading to our grand daughters - when I get to have them here and we aren't outside doing things...
I will usually take a good book with me when I do errands - w/ chores waiting when I get home, I usually will eat out and since by myself, I read for 30-60 minutes while enjoying my dinner - even if it's "just" fast food. Then, when I arrive home - I'm ready to hit chores and even work ponies depending on the time of day. I also like to keep a couple of books that I'm reading in my truck - for when I have Dr (right now - every month due to some ongoing issues w/ circulation in my legs/SX and a growth on my kidney), eye (1x yr) or dentist (2x yr unless problems) appointments. I prefer my reading over the types of magazines they have in their offices. I have, in the past, donated my horse & breed magazines to some of the offices I've gone to!
The training ones, are to see what I've forgotten OR remembered. It's fascinating to go back thru books that are 40-50 yrs old or even older and find the same training techniques that are "new" now, LOL.
The first set of books have arrived! They are in great shape except for one (and it's OK...). I drooled over the illustrations in Pony Farm. I'm reading The Phantom Roan right now. Have a couple by an author I grew reading but these are ones I've never seen (Can I Get There by Candlelight? and If Wishes Were Horses - both pre-teen type stories). Several of these books were listed as softcover but instead are hardbacks. I was surprised. The Western Trainer, by Dave Jones, is in probably the worst shape - the spine is broken both at the front and at the back. I may see if I can get our scanner to work and scan the pages individually to my laptop... It's in tiny format - I had this book in much larger format when I was a teen - LOVED the pics and the way he writes... Again, so many of my "likes" when it came to horse conformation is pictured in his book, so I'm sure that is where my own dissatisfaction with so many horses of today comes from, LOL!
Ryan - let me know if you can't, and I'll see what is available here and what it would cost to ship to AU. I suppose that gets pricey?