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list price: $24.95
edition:Paperback
category: Travel
published: Aug 2004
ISBN:9781553650720
publisher: Douglas & McIntyre

The Last Heathen

Encounters with Ghosts and Ancestors in Melanesia

by Charles Montgomery

tagged: adventure, australia & oceania, personal memoirs
Description

In 1892, the Bishop of Tasmania set sail for Melanesia with the intent of rescuing islanders from lives of fear, black magic and cannibalism. Over 100 years later, his great grandson, Charles Montgomery, followed the bishop's route through the South Pacific, seeking out the spirits and myths his missionary forebear had sought to destroy.

 

Montgomery explored remote shores where gospel and empire never took hold. He rubbed shoulders with barefoot preachers, witch doctors and gun-toting rebels, only to discover that the pagan spirits were more tenacious than the missionaries had imagined. Melanesians had stirred Jesus and Mary into an already spicy broth of ancestor worship, ghosts, shark gods and magic. Through confrontations with a bizarre cast of characters -- the randy ethnographer, the soft-talking assassin, the leper prophet -- the journey becomes a debate on the nature of magic, myth and faith, and a metaphor for the transforming power of story.

 

The Last Heathen marks the debut of an exciting young writer who charts his adventures with passion, insight and grace.

About the Author

Charles Montgomery

Awards
  • Winner, Charles Taylor Prize for Literary Non-Fiction
Editorial Reviews

"A very real and memoriable new talent...A script as delicate and impressively beautiful as any essay of exploration that I have read in recent years."

— Globe & Mail

"Really good travel writers weave their keen sense of place into a larger story. Mr. Montgomery's search for faith in the fractured paradise of Melanesia establishes him in the fron rank of writer's who travel."

— National Post

"As both traveler and writer, Montgomery is a thoughtful and entertaining guide, and his story has rich layers of history and anthropology. He creates a vivid impression of a region where you might just as easily be greeted with a machete as a steaming pile of laplap (a root vegetable pudding baked and served in coconut leaves)."

— New York Times Book Review
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