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Randell Nigel - The White Headhunter

Here you can read online Randell Nigel - The White Headhunter full text of the book (entire story) in english for free. Download pdf and epub, get meaning, cover and reviews about this ebook. City: Malaita Province (Solomon Islands);Scotland;Solomon Islands;Malaita Province, year: 2013, publisher: Little, Brown Book Group;Constable, genre: Detective and thriller. Description of the work, (preface) as well as reviews are available. Best literature library LitArk.com created for fans of good reading and offers a wide selection of genres:

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Randell Nigel The White Headhunter
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    The White Headhunter
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    Little, Brown Book Group;Constable
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    2013
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    Malaita Province (Solomon Islands);Scotland;Solomon Islands;Malaita Province
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The White Headhunter: summary, description and annotation

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Shanghaied in San Francisco in 1868, teenage Scots sailor Jack Renton then found himself on a voyage into the heart of darkness. Escaping from his floating prison in an open whaleboat, Renton drifted for 2000 miles, only to be washed up on the shores of a Pacific island shunned by 19th-century mariners, Malaita in the Solomon Islands. There he was stripped of his clothes by headhunters and forced to go native to survive. Initially a slave to their chief, Kabou, he eventually became the mans most trusted warrior and adviser. Rentons own account of his eight-year exile, published after.

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Necklace of 59 human teeth brought back by Jack Renton A detailed description - photo 1

Necklace of 59 human teeth brought back by Jack Renton. A detailed description appears on

For Tessa Fowler Constable Robinson Ltd 55-56 Russell Square London - photo 2

For Tessa Fowler

Constable & Robinson Ltd

55-56 Russell Square

London WC1B 4HP

www.constablerobinson.com

First published in the UK by Constable,
An imprint of Constable & Robinson Ltd 2003

Copyright Nigel Randell 2003

The right of Nigel Randell to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988

All rights reserved. This book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, re-sold, hired out or otherwise circulated in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser.

A copy of the British Library Cataloguing in
Publication Data is available from the British Library

ISBN 1-84119-601-0
eISBN 978-1-47211-332-0

Printed and bound in the EU

Jacket design by Peter Rozycki.

Contents

Acknowledgements This story was slowly excavated on a number of visits over - photo 3

Acknowledgements

This story was slowly excavated on a number of visits over eight years to a - photo 4

This story was slowly excavated on a number of visits over eight years, to a group of Pacific islands that see few tourists. The Solomon Islands, in particular, has been without government or infrastructure for over seven years and were it not for the hospitality of a number of people, Melanesians, missionaries and expatriates, my task would have been impossible. In particular I would like to thank Robertson Batu, Stewart Diudi, Ashley Kakaluae, Nathan Kera, Falataou Levi, Charlie Panakera, Dorothy and Loata Parkinson and finally, my long-time guide and mentor, Tessa Fowler, for housing me, feeding me and often interpreting for me. I owe special thanks to my brother James who, over a number of years, looked after me in Sydney on my return from the islands and helped me with ordering the material tapes, transcripts and photocopies that gradually leaked out of the guestroom to invade his house.

If this book can lay any claim to being unique then it is entirely due to the contributions of oral historians in the Solomons and Vanuatu. In particular I would like to thank Nelson Jack Boe, Anathanasias Orudiana, Jacob Selo, Grace Sosoe, Malachi Tate, Stewart Diudi, Peter Afoa and John Tamanta. I am particularly grateful to Mike McCoy who undertook the initial interviews.

During the years of research and writing there are a number of people in England and Australia whose help, encouragement and advice I would like to put on record. So my thanks to Dr Ian Byford, Andrew and Wendy Evans, Richard Gibb, Sara Feilden, Clare Littleton, Niall McDevitt, Ron Parkinson, Ben Timberlake, Dr James Warner, Chris Wright and, in particular, Genna Gifford.

For their courtesy and patience I owe a particular debt of thanks to Lawrence Foaunaota of the Solomon Islands National Museum, the staff of the Western Solomons Cultural Centre, Kirk Huffman of the Vanuatu Cultural Centre, Wendy Morrow of the National Library of Australia, and finally, the staff of the Mitchell Library in Sydney.

Like many first-time authors who know little about publishing, I was entirely dependent upon my agent for an introduction to this world. So to Andrew Lownie I owe a debt of thanks for his guidance, perseverance and enthusiasm and as all authors need an experienced editor, I believe that I was particularly fortunate. With candour, kindness and a sense of humour, Carol OBrien shepherded me through all the hoops.

List of Illustrations

Courtesy of The Mitchell Library Sydney Courtesy of The Mitchell Library - photo 5

Courtesy of The Mitchell Library, Sydney

Courtesy of The Mitchell Library, Sydney

Courtesy of The National Library of Australia, Canberra

Courtesy of The National Library of Australia, Canberra

Courtesy of The National Library of Australia, Canberra

Royal Anthropological Institute

Courtesy of The National Library of Australia, Canberra

Courtesy of The Mary Evans Picture Library

Courtesy of The Mitchell Library, Sydney

The Western Pacific, Walter Coote, 1883

ManMagazine Vol 14. 1907

Royal Geographical Society

The Savage South Seas, Elkington, 1897

The Royal Geographic Society

Courtesy of The Mary Evans Picture Library

Courtesy of The National Library of Australia, Canberra

*All Nigel Randell

The necklace is reproduced on by kind permission of the National Museums of Scotland.

Introduction T HE South Pacific as a real place - photo 6

Introduction T HE South Pacific as a real place had almost disappeared - photo 7

Introduction T HE South Pacific as a real place had almost disappeared - photo 8

Introduction

T HE South Pacific as a real place had almost disappeared For two centuries - photo 9

T HE South Pacific, as a real place, had almost disappeared. For two centuries this vast expanse of ocean and its thousands of little islands formed the backdrop upon which was projected all the baggage of European wish-fulfilment. It was not the writings of Banks, Bougainville, Cook or Rousseau, beguiling though they were, that touched an escapist chord in nineteenth-century Britain, but a literary genre that held enormous appeal for the newly literate masses contemplating their baleful futures in the Industrial Age. The Beachcomber Memoirs were true stories of ordinary seamen who had reinvented themselves on an alien shore. Men (and it was always men) who, by accident or design, had chosen a different life.

Throughout the century a stream of books, articles and serializations flooded the market on both sides of the Atlantic ten such books in English were published between 1831 and 1847 alone. Many are remarkable, not least because they capture, even in the rough ethnocentric prose in which most are written, a moment in time the genuine, unrepeatable moment of fear and wonder when, both black and white, floundering across a chasm of disbelief, struggled to acknowledge their common humanity. For the visited, without the conceptual tools to deal with the unknown, this must have been an epiphany nothing would ever be the same again. Unlike the discoveries of Galileo, Newton or Darwin and the gradual dawning upon Europes intelligentsia of a different worldview, these visitations would have been earth shattering.

During my wanderings in the South West Pacific, I became haunted by the belief that, for every beachcombers visit, a parallel narrative must have existed. Their story, as opposed to

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