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         Cahill Tim:     more books (84)
  1. People From Park County, Montana: People From Livingston, Montana, Torey Hayden, Dan Bailey, John F. Yancey, Tim Cahill, Wesley A. D'ewart
  2. Tim Cahill (Writer)
  3. Samoan Footballers: Tim Cahill, Pasi Schwalger, Chris Cahill, Desmond Fa'aiuaso, Dennis Bryce, Tama Fasavalu
  4. Olympic Footballers of Australia: Mark Bosnich, Mark Bresciano, Tim Cahill, Mark Viduka, Neil Kilkenny, Lucas Neill, Brett Emerton
  5. Australians of Samoan Descent: Karmichael Hunt, Tim Cahill, Willie Mason, Robyn Loau, Reni Maitua, Aaron Edwards, Ben Roberts, Frank Pritchard
  6. Australian Expatriate Football (Soccer) Players: Mark Bosnich, Harry Kewell, Patrick Kisnorbo, Mark Bresciano, Tim Cahill, Chris Coyne
  7. Meet the Innovators! 25 American Originals Who Are Shaping Yoga Today / Tim Cahill Does Yoga (and Barely Escapes Enlightenment) / The True Nature of Love / Mark Epstein on Meditation and Depression (Yoga Journal, October 2000)
  8. Footballeur International Australien: Mark Bresciano, Tim Cahill, Mile Sterjovski, Mark Viduka, Scott Mcdonald, Mark Schwarzer, Harry Kewell (French Edition)
  9. State Treasurers of Massachusetts: Tim Cahill, Joe Malone, Foster Furcolo, Frederick Mansfield, Treasurer and Receiver-General of Massachusetts
  10. Shipwreck of the Whaleship Essex by Owen Chase, 1999-08-01
  11. Explore : Stories of Survival From Off The Map (Adrenaline) by Lawrence Millman, Gene Savoy, et all 2000-09
  12. Dolphins by Tim Cahill, 2000
  13. PECKED TO DEATH BY DUCKS by Tim Cahill, 1992
  14. Pecked to Death by Ducks by Tim Cahill, 1994

41. TIM CAHILL: PASS THE BUTTERWORMS
A review by Catherine Flannery of Pass the Butterworms, a book that is "good to read and good Category Arts Literature Authors C cahill, tim Reviews...... By CATHERINE FLANNERY Toronto Sun PASS THE BUTTERWORMS tim cahill (Villard) Buttim cahill survives, thrives and carries on travelling, that is.
http://www.canoe.ca/JamBooksReviewsP/passthe_cahill.html
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Sunday, April 27, 1997 More Showbiz headlines
Malaria, beetles, worms it's another Cahill vacation
By CATHERINE FLANNERY Toronto Sun
PASS THE BUTTERWORMS
Tim Cahill
(Villard)
I think the malaria would have put me over the edge. Or perhaps I would have cracked after chowing down on fried beetle larvae (crispy on the outside, creamy on the inside) in the remote Indonesian jungle. And don't forget the close call with that apartment-sized slab of ice at Glacier Bay. Crazy stuff. But Tim Cahill survives, thrives and carries on travelling, that is.
Cahill, who makes his home in Montana, has been writing travelogues for the last 20 years. The adventures of this self-described "poor man's Jacques Cousteau" appear in publications such as Rolling Stone and a sister magazine he co-created, Outside.
His sixth book, Pass the Butterworms, is good to read and good for you. A reader might actually learn something about history, politics or ecology. There are fascinating stories such as the one about an Indonesian tribe that has a history of cannibalism and head-shrinking, and more intense ones which describe the consequences of "progress" in that same region ("The homogenization of humanity seems to be the direction of history") or the brutal, unsolved murder of two young Americans in Peru by members of an isolated tribe.

42. PHONE-SOFT INTERNET-VERZEICHNIS DEUTSCHLAND:CAHILL, TIM
Translate this page TOP-LINK, UP-LINK, DISCUSSION, SEARCH, INDEX, HELP. cahill, tim. Delfine- von tim cahill GLEICHE KATEGORIE ÖSTERREICH INTERNATIONAL.
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TOP-LINK UP-LINK DISCUSSION SEARCH ... HELP CAHILL, TIM
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  • Delfine - von Tim Cahill GLEICHE KATEGORIE: INTERNATIONAL
  • 43. By Tim Cahill
    Today's audio update tim cahill sings the blues about tough times in NewOrleans. Louis Armstrong. NEW ORLEANS—We're on a mission from God.
    http://slate.msn.com/id/2073792/entry/2073831/
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    well-traveled Dispatches from the front lines of travel.
    From: Tim Cahill
    Subject: Mysterious Ways
    Thursday, November 14, 2002, at 3:18 PM PT Today's audio update: Tim Cahill sings the blues about tough times in New Orleans. Louis Armstrong NEW ORLEANS—We're on a mission from God. Or from Slate magazine. We're a little unclear about this. In any case, our mission, which we have chosen to accept, requires us to trace the history of the "deep" blues, from its birthplace in the Mississippi Delta to its ultimate migration to Memphis, Chicago, and eventually the far corners of the world as we know it. Our quest has brought us first to New Orleans, the southern terminus of Route 61, the so-called Blues Highway. We'll be moving north, into the Delta. Along the way, we'll be forced to drive luxury rental cars, eat the best local food, and stay in many fine hotels. This life is hell, but someone's got to do it, and in this case, it's Christian Kallen and myself, two guys old enough to recall the blues revival in the clubs of Chicago in the mid-'60s, and the San Francisco dancehalls of the '70s. We were working very hard, of course, but New Orleans was working effortlessly to hold up its image as America's party central. At Brennan's Restaurant, we dined on blackened redfish and a butternut squash bisque served at the table by a tuxedoed waiter. On the way to our French Quarter hotel, the venerable Monteleone, friendly young women in abbreviated costumes leaned out of doorways and invited us inside, where, they gave us to understand, pleasure that surpassed understanding awaited us. We explained that it was necessary to get some sleep. We were on a mission from God.

    44. By Tim Cahill
    From tim cahill Subject It Changed Your Life Friday, November 22, 2002, at214 PM PT Today's audio update tim cahill returns to his blues roots.
    http://slate.msn.com/id/2073792/
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    well-traveled Dispatches from the front lines of travel.
    From: Tim Cahill
    Subject: It Changed Your Life
    Friday, November 22, 2002, at 2:14 PM PT Today's audio update: Tim Cahill returns to his blues roots. Muddy Waters It was Muddy Waters who took the Delta blues north to Chicago, electrified the sound, and changed the course of popular music as we know it. That's pretty much the judgment of history, and it is mine as well. I remember hearing Muddy Waters play, but in the mid-'60s, during a blues revival. I was a college student and unaware of the fact that the blues were being revived or that they needed to be. The music and the lyrics moved me. Still do. Muddy Waters grew up on the Stovall Plantation, not far out of Clarksdale, Miss. The house where he lived is gone now, rebuilt in the Delta Blues Museum in Clarksdale. The idea was to preserve the structure, a humble rough-cut cedar building of the type that housed sharecroppers. There was only a depression in the grass where Muddy's childhood home had been. A plaque nearby identified the site and included a quote from Eric Clapton: "[Muddy Waters'] music changed my life, and whether you know it or not, and like it or not, it probably changed yours, too." These words ring true. I could see it all over the blues highway, which had taken us from New Orleans north to the Mississippi Delta, where the music we call the blues was born. The blues wandered off down south, where it influenced the sound of the jazz that was springing up in different forms in New Orleans. But most of the blues traveled with itinerant blues men, and it moved north. Memphis, the capital of the mid-South, only a few hundred miles north of the Delta, was a natural destination for a musically talented and ambitious man.

    45. Movies Unlimited: Product Page
    Category Mystery Director Lamont Johnson Cast Christine Belford, Barry cahill,tim O'Connor, James Olson, Alan Oppenheimer, George Peppard, Cliff Potts
    http://www.moviesunlimited.com/musite/product.asp?sku=071507

    46. Taking A Dip In Shark Alley With Tim Cahill
    An interview in Real Audio format.Category Arts Literature Authors C cahill, tim......Taking a Dip in Shark Alley Interview with tim cahill. Listen withRealAudio Interview with tim cahill. The last time we spoke with
    http://www.savvytraveler.org/show/features/1998/19981024/cahill.shtml

    Show and Features
    Deal of the Week-Travel Update
    Culture Watch
    Question of the Week ... Host's View
    Taking a Dip in Shark Alley
    Interview with Tim Cahill

    Listen with RealAudio: Interview with Tim Cahill The last time we spoke with travel writer Tim Cahill, he talked about his adventures in Mongolia...riding across vast expanses of eastern China on the back of a pony and eating something unidentifiably he decided to call, "noisy cheese". Today Tim's come to talk about an adventure that's even more outrageous...swimming with great white sharks in South Africa that probably weigh as much as your car! After I read his article in the August issue of Outside Magazine , I just had to know, Tim, what in the world were you thinking?
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    47. Travelhog.net/Tim Cahill
    Travelhog.net has the best collection of online travelogues, books and eCards. Thispage highlights travelogues, cards and books from tim cahill. tim cahill.
    http://travelhog.net/author.asp?a=464

    48. Travelhog.net/Tim Cahill/Not So Funny When It Happened
    On this page, find information about tim cahill's book 'Not So Funny When It Happened'. Search,the Web TravelHog.net. Not So Funny When It Happened tim cahill
    http://travelhog.net/Book.asp?a=464&t=89

    49. Cahill, Tim
    cahill, tim. ISBN 0792275942. Dolphins.
    http://www.sofitware.com/books/sci05/0792275942.html
    Cahill, Tim
    ISBN: 0792275942 Dolphins Info and Order ... next
    Register

    Matthias Zehe
    http://www.sofitware.com/books/

    Phone: 0049-8704-506 , Fax 0049-8704-8375,
    Post Box 1542, D-84003 Landshut,
    Other trademarks are property of respective owners. books@sofitware.com

    50. Travelers' Tales: Not So Funny When It Happened - Tim Cahill - About The Editor
    tim cahill is the author of seven books, mostly travel related, including JaguarsRipped My Flesh, Pecked to Death by Ducks, Pass the Butterworms, and Dolphins
    http://www.travelerstales.com/catalog/funny/author.html
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    About the Author
    Tim Cahill is the author of seven books, mostly travel related, including Jaguars Ripped My Flesh, Pecked to Death by Ducks, Pass the Butterworms, and Dolphins . He describes his travel writing as "remote journeys, oddly rendered." Reviewers have been overwhelmingly kind, though some have accused him of having a sense of humor. Cahill is also the co-author of the Academy Award nominated IMAX film, The Living Sea , as well as the films Everest and Dolphins . He lives in Montana. Return to Not So Funny When It Happened
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    51. Travelers' Tales: Not So Funny When It Happened - Tim Cahill - Table Of Contents
    Table Of Contents. Introduction tim cahill The Elephant that Roared Cleo PaskalFaroe Islands, North Atlantic. Speaking in Tongues tim cahill California.
    http://www.travelerstales.com/catalog/funny/toc.html
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    Table Of Contents
    Introduction
    Tim Cahill How I Killed Off My Ex-Wife
    John Wood
    Vietnam Hold On to Your Lunch
    Elliot Neal Hester
    Airborne Everybody's Got Glorious Hide Next to Me and My Monkey
    Jayce White
    Zimbabwe The Aunties
    Anne Lamott Mexico Jesus Shaves David Sedaris France Benvenuto a Italia! Sourav Sen Italy Mexican Mating Calls Germaine Shames Mexico What's Cooking? Bill Bryson Vermont The Dentist in Cameroon Nigel Barley Cameroon The Crafty Cousin William Dalrymple Syria Incident at San Antonio Luis Alberto Urrea Mexico A Train, a Frog, and Aliens Randy Wayne White USA They Tell Me You Are Big Todd McEwen Chicago The Transit Lounge Shuffle Douglas Adams and Mark Carwardine Tanzania The King of the Ferret-Leggers Donald Katz Scotland What I Did in the Doll House Sean O'Reilly Massachusetts The Copenhagen T-Shirt Thom Elkjer Denmark The Rodent Mark Salzman China It's a Man's World Lynn Ferrin Yosemite Penny Pinched Rolf Potts Thailand Called on the Carpet in Marrakech John Flinn Morocco Passing the Test in Silverton Gary A. Warner

    52. Tim Cahill, Jaguars Ripped My Flesh
    tim cahill, Jaguars Ripped My Flesh (Bantam, 1987). Brazen stupidity willget you anywhere in life. That, and complete and utter irreverance.
    http://www.rambles.net/cahill_jaguars.html
    Tim Cahill,
    Jaguars Ripped My Flesh
    (Bantam, 1987)
    Brazen stupidity will get you anywhere in life. That, and complete and utter irreverance. The adventure travel book Jaguars Ripped My Flesh offers rather stunning proof of this. One of Outside magazine's founding editors and a longtime contributor to Rolling Stone, Tim Cahill regales us with tales of fearsome and certainly humourous adventure written from his very unique, quirky perspective. Diving with sharks, caving in Kentucky, skydiving in California, filming poison sea snakes in the Philipines and exploring ancient ruins in Peru. The author has done it all and kept us laughing through his experiences. "Personally, I've found that it doesn't pay to take these accomplishments too seriously. I spend a lot of time laughing at myself." Cahill sums it up nicely, just like a walk in the park. Next minute, he's flying with the Air Force Weather Reconnaissance Squadron into the eye of a hurricane. Admittedly, what else can you do but laugh in the face of danger when you're already too scared to throw up? Comprised of thirty stories under separate and appropriate divisions

    53. National Geographic Adventure Photo: Writer Tim Cahill
    April 2002. Close Window Writer tim cahill. Close Window Photograph by WilliamCaldwell. © 2002 National Geographic Society. All rights reserved.
    http://www.nationalgeographic.com/adventure/0204/cahill_popup.html
    April 2002
    Writer Tim Cahill
    Photograph by William Caldwell
    window.epulse_content_group="cg1=NGA,cg2=NGAdventureMag";

    54. Tim Cahill Wins Coaching Honor
    And now tim cahill has a crown of his own the National Federation InterscholasticCoaches Association's Section 2 Distinguished Service Award for Boys
    http://www.pr.eku.edu/news/cahill.htm
    Model Swimming Coach Receives Prestigious Honor
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    His Model Laboratory High School swimming teams have captured two state championships, a state runner-up finish and more than 20 girls, boys and combined team regional titles.
    And now Tim Cahill has a crown of his own the National Federation Interscholastic Coaches Association's Section 2 Distinguished Service Award for Boys Swimming and Diving. The Section includes the states of Delaware, Kentucky, Maryland, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Virginia and West Virginia and the District of Columbia.
    Cahill, a member of EKU's health education faculty since 1979, is in his 19th year as Model coach. He also was the assistant coach for the University's swimming team from 1979 to 1987 and has coached the Arlington swim team since 1987.
    "This honor is just a reflection of how good the kids have been as far as learning and growing and accepting the challenges put in front of them," Cahill said. "My goal is for them to be the best they can be. Everybody has a different level of talent and potential, and it's my job to develop that in and out of the water and support their classroom activities, because they're students first and athletes second."
    The Model Lab boys team captured the state championship in 1984 and the combined boys and girls title in 1996. The girls team was runner-up in 1981. Since 1982, the Model boys teams have dominated the Central Kentucky Regional, winning top honors 12 times.

    55. Profile: Tim Cahill
    HOME Outside Online talks with Outside magazine's roving correspondent tim Cahillabout his latest book, Pass the Butterworms Remote Journeys Oddly Rendered.
    http://web.outsideonline.com/disc/guest/cahill/favbooks.html
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    Journeys oddly rendered
    Some of my favorite books
    By Tim Cahill I suppose any list of my favorite books would change significantly from year to year. As I read this one over, it seems pretty selfish. It's all about literary problems I encounter every day. It's about me, me, me. Editor's note: The hot-link titles will take you to Amazon.com, an online bookstore, but there are often other editions, including hardcovers, and audio tapes, that you can order. So browse before you buy. Desert Solitaire
    By Edward Abbey For me, me, me, this was a seminal book. Abbey wrote about the conservation and values of wilderness in a way that seemed to fill a void in my soul. I studied the essays in Desert Solitaire an account a summer spent as a Park Ranger in the deserts of Utahand realized that what I'd written up to that point was a glorified personal journal. Abbey's work operated in some higher dimension. His account of retrieving a body from the sands"The Dead Man at Grandview Point"is nothing less that a meditation on death, transfiguration, and the Eternal. All that and laugh out loud funny in the bargain. Heart of Darkness
    By Joseph Conrad This dark novella seems to have come boiling up out of some twisted jungle in Conrad's subconscious. The writing is dense and lush; lovely and terrifying. It is perfectly suited to the physical and moral landscape. A modern editor would likely cross out every other adjective, and encourage Conrad to use a stripped down, leaner, more muscular style. That editor would be a moron.

    56. Guest: Tim Cahill
    HOME an error occurred while processing this directive The Lodge Gueststim cahill What do you think of using a GPS? Question tim,
    http://web.outsideonline.com/disc/guest/cahill/fred.html
    [an error occurred while processing this directive]
    Tim Cahill
    What do you think of using a GPS?
    Question: Tim, In Douglas Adams's classic Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy series, he states that the most important object a traveler must possess is a towel. Currently trapped here on Earth (due to the fact that space travel is only in its dawning age, our misfortune in being born so soon), most of us must focus our travels here on Earth, as you have done, Tim. My nomination for the one most important thing a traveler here on Earth should have is a GPS receiver (let's assume our hand-held receiver also has a compass function, as most of them do, thus giving us that handy tool also). Whether at sea, on a continental glacier like Antarctica or Greenland, or deep in Africa, the GPS receiver will give us a coordinate and a direction to get us to the nearest destination. Even if you have lost your map, if you have any common sense you can remember what DIRECTION you came into the woods from (or sea, or ice, or desert, etc.) and with the GPS you can get a sense of whether to return from whence you came or push on to the safety that now lies further ahead. I cannot think of a handier thing. My question is, can you? What is the one most handy thing any traveler should have here on Earth, no matter where you are traveling? That's my question to you, Tim, oh Master Exotic Traveler.

    57. Tim Cahill (Bold Type Magazine)
    Twenty five years ago, tim cahill took American adventure writing backto its roots in the outdoor tales of Cooper, Twain and Hemingway.
    http://www.randomhouse.com/boldtype/0902/cahill/
    Twenty five years ago, Tim Cahill took American adventure writing back to its roots in the outdoor tales of Cooper, Twain and Hemingway. Ever since, his first-person adventure columns in Outside magazine have single-handedly pioneered a new literary form where the pursuit of heroic quests in remote locales frequently trips over hidden obstacles or bumps into the modest limits of the writer's skills in the hairy-chested outdoor arts. Now, with the publication of Hold the Enlightenment, More Travel Less Bliss , Cahill again boldly gallumphs forth in the footsteps of his previous Pecked to Death by Ducks, A Wolverine is Eating My Leg, and Pass the Butterworms . Whether he's running from bandits in the Sahara, chasing narcoterrorists in Colombian or simply going for a swim with great white sharks, Cahill risks life and limb to take his readers beyond where even the most intrepid of them would go themselves. He also gets peed on by chimps, suffers paralyzing bouts of panic and falls off a cliff. Adventure and misadventure, Cahill suggests, can look an awful lot alike when you're in the midst of either one. Cahill notes that there are more unfriendly people with guns here than in his earlier books, but he also spends plenty of time contemplating places where peril doesn't lurk.

    58. Bold Type: Conversation With Tim Cahill
    tim cahill I have no problem with the adventure travel movement. Itmakes better, more sensitive people. If you get people diving
    http://www.randomhouse.com/boldtype/0902/cahill/interview.html
    old Type: You've been writing about adventure travel for 25 years. Partly because of your success there's now a huge adventure travel industry that has put a lot of people out in the kinds of places you used to have all to yourself. Are you encouraged by this or does it seem like you've got this annoying horde of wankers following you around? Tim Cahill: I have no problem with the adventure travel movement. It makes better, more sensitive people. If you get people diving on a coral reef they're going to become more respectful of the outdoors and more concerned with the threats that places like that face and they're going to care more about protecting them than they would have before. But it does make it harder for me. They go to all the best places. BT: But where does that leave you as far as potential trips you can write about then? Isn't it becoming harder to find unfamiliar places? Might the "been there, done that" problem crop up for you from time to time? TC: Yeah, I see guidebooks that say things like, "There's this famous article by Tim Cahill in Jaguars Ripped my Flesh, and this is how you do it." BT: What about the piece in your new book about your trip to Colombia with Robert Pelton, the guy who does those "World's Most Dangerous Places" things on TV? You guys deliberately tracked down the FARC guerillas, people who have a stated policy of using kidnapping as part of their war against the government. Is putting yourself in harm's way like Pelton does the inevitable dystopian future of adventure travel?

    59. Books: Tim Cahill
    tim cahill. Sort this page listing by Bestselling.
    http://www.eltunel.net/search/books/AuthorSearch/Tim Cahill/1/
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    More Travel Books: Audiobooks Guidebook Series Specialty Travel Travel e-Books ... Regional Calendars Tim Cahill Sort this page listing by: Bestselling Featured Items Alphabetical (A-Z) Publication Date Price (Low to High) Price (High to Low) Alphabetical (Z-A) Average Customer Review Wild Ocean: America's Parks Under the Sea by: Sylvia A. Earle Wolcott Henry Tim Cahill Jean-Michel Coustean August, 1999 List Price: Amazon.com's Price: You Save: Amazon.com prices subject to change. Hold the Enlightenment: More Travel, Less Bliss by: Tim Cahill 03 September, 2002 List Price: Amazon.com's Price: You Save: Amazon.com prices subject to change. Atlas of the Ocean: The Deep Frontier by: National Geographic Sylvia A. Earle

    60. Eye - BOOKS Pecked To Death By Ducks Tim Cahill - 10.06.94
    A review of the book that provides "a vicarious reading experience that combines the best elements Category Arts Literature Authors C cahill, tim Reviews...... eye 10.06.94. PECKED TO DEATH BY DUCKS By tim cahill Vintage, $16paper. You can't accuse tim cahill of playing it safe. After all
    http://www.eye.net/Arts/Books/1994/bo1006e.htm
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