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Adventure
on the high seas
The Navigators
by Klaus Toft, Duffy and Snellgrove, 354 pages. $20
Reviewer
::
Michael Weaver
The
story could not be condensed into two hours of television.
If
you long for a genuine tale of adventure on the high seas,
this is a great read. Furthermore, The Navigators, derived
from an ABC series of the same name, unveils fascinating history
about the so-called race between Matthew Flinders and Nicolas
Baudin to discover the fabled passage through the middle of
Australia.
Tofts
original brief was to produce a documentary about Matthew
Flinders to coincide with the bicentennial of his voyage,
but his research soon found that to tell the story of Flinders
without reference to Baudin would be like telling the story
of Bonaparte without mentioning Josephine.
The
full story could not be condensed into two hours of television,
thus the book was born.
The
Navigators puts into perspective the part Baudin played in
our history and how he was held responsible for Frances
failure to colonise Terres Australes. An enormous historical
injustice was done to the Baudins memory, Toft
writes in his prologue.
At
the end of the book, he notes that Flinders name was
honoured in Australia in more than 90 places, while the name
Baudin appeared in only eight.
Between
all this is a tale of exploration, lies, betrayal and a huge
collection of plants and animals, ending with the imprisonment
of one captain and the death of another.
It
is also not surprising that the book has far outsold the video.
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