In Search of Tusitala: Travels in the Pacific After Robert Louis Stevenson

by Gavin Bell

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Gavin Bell, for many years an admirer of Stevenson and his work, resolved to retrace Stevenson's passage through the communities of French Polynesia, Hawaii, Kiribati and Samoa. In doing so, he saw one of the finest privately owned Stevenson collections.

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Member Reviews

2 reviews
Bell has accomplished the perfect balance between biography, history, travel writing and political and social commentary. None of these elements are strained, they all flow (seemingly) effortlessly into each other. Bell brings an extraordinary cut-through honesty to his task, His writing sparkles and continually engages the reader with stories of simple and extraordinary lives, past and present. This is a superb biography of Robert Louis Stevenson's final years, but it is also an unsurpassed introduction to the people and the issues of the Pacific. Very highly recommended.
½
So, so far more than another "travel" book, a paean of praise, a hymn and a poetic rush of prose in the praise of the human spirit. of friendship, of kindness, of the sheer humanity that both author and RLS found in the islands. A simple proposal; to follow the track of Robert Louis Stevenson (the famed Tusitala - teller of tales) around the Islands of the South Seas, leads to deep, soul-felt experiences of romance and interpersonal and geographically awesome relationships.

Gavin Bell, a hardened and hard-nosed war correspondent, follows his fellow Scot into the realms of the cultures and fables of the Polynesians and mellows - just as RLS did before him - in their extensive and extending humanity.

Truly, they both find a 'paradise', show more faults and smells notwithstanding. Home is the hunter, home from the hills and the sailor, home from the Southern Seas.

Highly recommended for both prose and insight.
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2 Works 91 Members

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Common Knowledge

People/Characters
Robert Louis Stevenson
Important places
Pacific Ocean
Dedication
This book is for my mum and dad without whom, of course, it would never have been written
First words
It is difficult to imagine the tranquillity of a pine forest by moonlight when there are tracer bullets coming through your bathroom window.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)Thus the dead man speaks to you from the dust: you will hear no more from him.

Classifications

Genres
Travel, Fiction and Literature, Biography & Memoir
DDC/MDS
828.809Literature & rhetoricEnglish & Old English literaturesEnglish miscellaneous writings1837-1899Individual authors
LCC
PR5495 .B37Language and LiteratureEnglishEnglish Literature19th century , 1770/1800-1890/1900

Statistics

Members
45
Popularity
658,511
Reviews
2
Rating
(4.07)
Languages
English
Media
Paper
ISBNs
2