G'day ofuros,
If you don't have much in the way of wildlife identification books I would highly recommend a couple of the Queensland Museum publications, both 'wildlife of greater brisbane' & 'wild guide to moreton bay' are great little guides to the wildife in our area. Over a thousand animals described from insects & reptiles to fish, mammals & birds (to name a few, theres even worms, arachnids & molluscs!) covering the most commonly found animals from most of the major groups (a comprehensive listing of all the 'known' animals living in our bioregion would fill numerous large volumes...). These guides were standard fare whilst I was doing field trips and studying environmental science at uni, going and doing wildlife surveys at places like the border ranges, etc. I live in North-east NSW and find these two to be outstanding ID books amongst my personal collection of wildlife, geological and botanical reference material.
p.s. accurate snake ID can sometimes only be possible when a specimen has its scales
counted. Of all the majpr reptile groups snakes are generally regarded as the hardest to identify and most people refer to snake sightings as 'browns' when they are more often than not anything but. Truth is many snakes
are brown but there are also regional differences in snake colouration and marking as well as differences between juveniles and adults, and etc etc... I've witnessed herpetologically minded individuals, snake experts, argue about the identification of a sighting, pretty amusing

But not worrying like the time we were surveying in forest and a teacher dived on an unknown snake as it tried to flee into the undergrowth

turned out it was a 'brown' snake...
ALWAYS be yourself.
Unless you can be outside, then ALWAYS be outside.