informative slow-paced

 I'm sure I was more interested by this because I come from New Zealand. I was happy to see a cast of native birds and aquatic mammals that are familiar.. and I kept a map open so I could peruse the terrain of the book. These islands are much bigger than I had thought.

The narrator had a good go at the reo Māori, and got most of it about right.. though words like "Ngāti" had him a bit at a loss (hint: not n'Gaat-ee ; soft ng sound like in sing) 

I do like a good survival story and was surprised that this book contained more than one. Comparing the strategies and attitudes of two sets of castaways enriched my understanding of what it was like for them. I enjoyed the accounts of how shelter and housing was accomplished, and I'm not too squeamish about having to hunt to survive. I loved looking up the edible plants as I went. Some of the things that were in the reports and memoirs of the lost, were a little fanciful, but why not. 

This was a really good counterpoint to that awful whale book 😉 because it actually contained an account of what it is like to be stranded far from family and actually worry about them. I wonder, if the author deliberately omitted the likely Racism and Sexism from the accounts that she selected to present the story of these shipwrecked men. If so, I noticed the absence. 

Expand filter menu Content Warnings