The Cruise of the Janet Nichol among the South Sea Islands: A diary by Mrs Robert Louis Stevenson
UNSW Press, $34.95 hb, 208 pp
Albert Wendt and Pacific Literature: Circling the void
Auckland University Press, $49.95 pb, 312 pp
Looking at Both Sides
Whether it’s fate or mere coincidence, the life stories of the two most celebrated writers of the Pacific – Robert Louis Stevenson and Albert Wendt – dovetail together on the small tropical island of Upolu in Western Samoa. In 1889, when Stevenson concluded his third Pacific cruise on the Janet Nichol, he told his readers in Europe and America that: ‘Few men who come to the islands leave them; they grow grey where they alighted; the palm trees and trade-wind fan them till they die.’ In hindsight, this reads as a premonition, but, after years of ill-health Stevenson was seduced and invigorated by sweet air and unexpected interests, describing his time during the Pacific voyages as ‘passing like days in fairyland’.
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The Cruise of the Janet Nichol among the South Sea Islands: A diary by Mrs Robert Louis Stevenson
edited by Roslyn Jolly
UNSW Press, $34.95 hb, 208 pp
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