I myself always thought the most worthless book about British India--although it was in fact a best-seller--was Collins and LaPierre's Freedom at Midnight, about India circa 1946-1948.
It was for the general public, of course, but for anyone really into history, it was rather shallow.
I also had no interest in Australia until I came across a book of folk songs in the 1800's from down under. Who were these people and why did the songs sound so familiar.?
As I dug in I found that American History and Australia paralleled themselves.
Both country's had the same problems and the same hope for the immigrants, be they from the prisons of England to people escaping the prisons of Europe.
The time line is extraordinary, we had train robbers so did they. We had a rail road to build so did they, both country's had gold rushes at about the same time, both had home steaders in wagons headed west, both had to fight off the Aborigines of the land.
China is another bag of worms, it seems that those born to royalty had a horrid life, while the very poor had much more freedon and joy and laughter then those poor folk raised in a palace.