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Advance Australasia: A Day-to-Day Record of a Recent Visit to Australasia. Second Edition.

By Frank Thomas Bullen

(3.5 stars) • 10 reviews

Journey alongside an early traveler as he observes a land transformed, revealing progress and beauty decades after his first encounter.

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Released
2020-12-17
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Summary

"Advance Australasia: A Day-to-Day Record of a Recent Visit to Australasia" by Frank T. Bullen is a recounting of the author's experiences traveling to Australasia in the early 1900s. The story is delivered as a journal of the author's recent tour and conveys his reflections as he juxtaposes this trip with his initial visit over three decades prior. Bullen's narrative highlights the changes in society and culture between the eras, describes the political landscape, and presents the natural geographic beauty he witnesses along the way. He presents a changing world, from reminiscing about rougher ocean voyages of the past to the ease and comforts of modern steamships and public life in cities like Perth and Adelaide, offering insights into the region's progress and the human stories woven into its evolution.

About the Author

Frank Thomas Bullen, British novelist, was born of poor parents in Paddington, London, on 5 April 1857, and was educated for a few years at a dame school and Westbourne school, Paddington. At the age of 9, his aunt, who was his guardian, died. He then left school and took up work as an errand boy. In 1869 he went to sea and travelled to all parts of the world in various capacities including that of second mate of the Harbinger and chief mate of the Day Dawn, under Capt. John R. H. Ward jun in 1879 when she was dismasted and disabled. Having spent 15 years of his life at sea, since the tender age of 12, he would later describe the hardships of his early life thus: I have been beaten by a negro lad as big again as myself, and only a Frenchman interfered on my behalf. Those were the days when boys in Geordie colliers or East Coast fishing smacks were often beaten to insanity and jumped overboard, or were done to death in truly savage fashion, and all that was necessary to account for their non returning was a line in the log to the effect that they had been washed or had fallen overboard. A parallel may be drawn with Joseph Conrad's career at sea aboard Torrens 1891–1893. He was a clerk in the Meteorological Office from 1883 to 1889. His reputation was made over the publication of The Cruise of the "Cachalot" (1898); and he also wrote, amongst other books, Idylls of the Sea (1899); Sea Wrack (1903); The Call of the Deep (1907) and A Compleat Sea Cook (1912), besides many articles and essays. He lectured extensively and was highly critical of Australasia's lack of defences against what he saw as imminent naval threats from Germany and Japan. He died at Madeira on 1 March 1915.

Average Rating
4.0
Aggregate review score sourced from Goodreads
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Total Reviews
10.0k
Total reviews from Goodreads may change