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Solomon Time: An Unlikely Quest in the South Pacific
 
 
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Solomon Time: An Unlikely Quest in the South Pacific [Hardcover]

Will Randall (Author)
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)


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Book Description

February 25, 2003

Who hasn't fantasized about dismantling his or her hassled, wired-up life for a simpler existence? Yet who among us has the will and opportunity to do it? The answer, of course, is very few.

Will Randall, a young English schoolmaster, had such a chance -- and took it. He uprooted his conventional First World life and let himself be blown to one of the farthest and most beautiful corners of the earth, the Solomon Islands of the South Pacific. In the entertaining tradition of Bill Bryson's In a Sunburned Country, this is the story of Solomon Time.

From the first, it's an improbable journey. In a chance encounter on a rugby field, Randall meets a doddering old man known as "the Commander," who has retired to England after running a cocoa plantation in the South Pacific for thirty years. Six months later, the Commander dies and his will is read: he wants someone to travel to his beloved, long-missed island -- where his plantation has fallen into ruin -- and devise a way for the natives to support themselves. If successful, they might avoid poverty, build a new school, and even fend off the greedy developers circling their peaceful waters.

It's a mission of noblesse oblige, yet possibly a fool's errand, too. Randall agrees to go.

Spread across the Tropic of Capricorn, the Solomon Islands are not so much the Pacific archipelago that time forgot as the one that forgets time. Randall's new home is Mendali, a fishing village so remote it can be reached only by motorized canoe. But the people of the village, some with cheeks engraved with a rising sun, are welcoming, for they remember the Commander kindly, and still practice a pagan Anglicanism in a church he built for them in 1956. They sleep in houses made of leaves and live on fish of every sort, mud crabs, yams, ngali nuts, even the honeycomb of termites.

Randall decides that the villagers could raise chickens, and they greet the idea with enthusiasm. But finding live chicken eggs in their watery world proves wildly difficult, and Randall must chase after the eggs over shark-infested seas and through jungles where strange characters reside, including a one-eyed dwarf and a tattooed lady.

One couldn't imagine a better man than Will Randall to help the people of Mendali meet the twenty-first century on their own terms. But will he succeed?

Solomon Time is a moving and witty account of one man's accidental adventure in paradise and is certain to enchant explorers and armchair travelers alike.


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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Schoolteacher Randall was in such a rut he barely noticed it. He'd spent 10 years trying to teach French to unwilling British schoolboys. All his 30-something buddies were pairing off in respectable marriages, while his occasional girlfriends were becoming increasingly rare. Suddenly, after a slightly inebriated evening, he found himself involved in a bizarre mission: to fulfill the last wishes of an old man affiliated with his school, he agreed to go to the Solomon Islands and help organize a community project. Armed only with supreme ignorance-and a certain boredom with the life he'd been leading-Randall set off. In spite of his anxieties, he found everyone on the islands delightfully friendly, unhurried and unworried. Randall quickly relaxed into "Solomon Time," i.e., manana, whenever. His attempts to call a meeting to discuss what sort of self-help enterprise the islanders would like were ignored, so he decided they'd raise chickens, since no one else seemed to have thought of it. A capital idea-except they needed starter chicks. Randall treats readers to a picaresque adventure through the Solomons in search of elusive chicken dealers. Eventually, Randall's village not only got their chickens, but were so successful they started a Chicken Willy fast food joint. After about a year, with terrible reluctance, Randall decided it was time to return to England and see what the rest of the world was doing. Randall's account is great fun, perfect for, as the dedication suggests, "anyone who thinks it might be time for a change." Map.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist

In the comical bunglers-abroad mode, a refugee from civilization regales readers with the story of his adaptation to South Seas living. English schoolteacher Randall decamped for the Solomon Islands, enjoined to fulfill the will of a plantation owner who commanded that his legacy be applied to a project for the islanders. This task structures Randall's self-deprecating narrative, for he arrives admittedly ignorant of everything about the Solomons, and his anecdotes track his risibly steep learning curve. After descending the technological transportation ladder from intercontinental jet to dugout canoe, Randall arrives on Rendova, a scene of fierce World War II combat. Peaceful languor has since reasserted itself, marked by the inhabitants' indifference to punctuality, which Randall gradually absorbs through all manner of adventures, including his mock-heroic survival as a castaway. Equally snafu plagued, Randall's project, chicken husbandry, both mystifies and amuses his islander friends, as it will Randall's readers, who will be chuckling over the author's humorous stumbles in his implicit satire on Westerners trying to uplift non-Westerners. Gilbert Taylor
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 283 pages
  • Publisher: Scribner; 1 edition (February 25, 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 074324396X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0743243964
  • Product Dimensions: 8.8 x 5.8 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 15.2 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,122,596 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars "It was quite acceptable to do nothing...", March 28, 2003
This review is from: Solomon Time: An Unlikely Quest in the South Pacific (Hardcover)
Will Randall, though a high school teacher for ten years, is really just a kid--thirty-two years old, but still young in his attitudes and in his views of what life, and his own life, in particular, are all about. Unsophisticated and incurious, he has been content to let life happen to him. When his friend Charles suggests that he give up his job and go to the Solomon Islands for a year, he demurs, but Charles is an executor of the will of an Englishman known as the Commander, who has left money for the benefit of the islanders, if someone will go there to develop a reliable industry that will provide the villagers with income they can use for community improvements. Eventually, Randall finds himself agreeing to go, not making a decision so much as just going with the flow.

Randall experiences a delayed coming of age on New Georgia Island, a process he documents in this good-humored tale, filled with delightful characters and observations about life in a community in which there is little change. Ingenuous and unambitious, he enjoys the lullaby rhythms of life in the tropics, but he eventually determines that raising chickens would both provide income and expand the limited diet of the villagers. Describing how he sets up this business, he also comments on village mores, including the cannibalism which existed until the early 20th century. He briefs the reader on the World War II history of the nearby island of Guadalcanal, retells the story of JFK and PT-109, which went down in the Solomon Islands, and describes his own personal disasters, mocking himself at one point, after he falls overboard in shark infested waters and watches as his motorized canoe continues on its way.

Far more interested in telling a story than in contemplating his inner growth or making weighty observations about what he has learned, Randall pokes fun at himself and at the one or two "villains" he encounters with the chicken-business, and he concentrates on telling amusing episodes rather than developing any deep or universally meaningful conclusions. His decision to return to England comes suddenly, with no fanfare and even less explanation, and he offers few clues about what he has learned or why he has chosen this particular time to leave.

Though the author is very entertaining, he sometimes mixes metaphors and similes into a colorful but almost incoherent jumble. At one point, he describes Honiara, the capital, as "the unsightly boil in the navel of the islands." In the next sentence, he says Honiara is "reminiscent of the cardboard set of a low-budget spaghetti Western," and describes it also as "slouching like a hungover vagrant against the foothills of Tandachehe Ridge." Despite such confusions in imagery, however, he succeeds in writing an enjoyable, good-natured, and often charming story which will amuse readers of all ages. Mary Whipple

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars a volunteer in the Solomon Islands, January 3, 2004
This review is from: Solomon Time: An Unlikely Quest in the South Pacific (Hardcover)
This book tells the rather self-deprecatory tale of an English school teacher who becomes a volunteer in the Solomon Islands. A chance meeting with an ex-colonial identified as "the commander" sends Will Randall to Rendova Island in the Western Solomons with the vague intention of helping the local villagers create some sort of income-generating project. Randall's first weeks are spent acclimatizing to the slow pace of Solomons life, until a divemaster in nearby Munda suggests he help the villagers set up a chicken farm to supply meat to the local guest houses. Despite the ethnic conflicts raging in the capital Honiara, Will Randall manages with difficulty to locate the correct breeding hens, and Chicken Willy is soon dispensing fried fast food to one and all at Munda Market. Solomon Time is a case study of the naive Westerner in a tropical location who arrives to do good and stays to go native. It's appropriate reading for anyone considering doing something similar.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Pleasant, but a Bit Unfulfilling, December 26, 2010
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I read this book because I love travel writing, because I was a Peace Corps Volunteer (in Ghana, West Africa), and because I have been to the Solomon Islands.

So when I read some of the descriptions of the book I became excited about Will Randall's "Solomon Time." Well, I was not too impressed. Not entirely disappointed either. It was refreshing to read conversations in pidgin English and read descriptions of Honiara and Munda (though I disagree that Honiara is a horrible place). What I was hoping for was more closure to the story and more lessons learned as a volunteer. It sounds like Will had a good experience with his chicken project and the follow up restaurant, but what became of these ventures? I, for one, don't remember Chicken Willie's in Munda when I was there in 2009, but perhaps I missed it. I don't know how I could have, but perhaps...

Some of the descriptions are quite contrived, too. I love a good descriptive travel narrative, and if your job is to describe the Solomon Islands, you'd better be ready. It is a brilliant place with more colors than anywhere else in the world. His description of the chicken crowing and the sun coming up like a big fiery disc... blah blah blah... was just not up to par with how other travel writers could have dealt with it. I'm a fan of Theroux and Bryson, so perhaps I was expecting too much.

The book also reads like a choppy set of chapters all thrown together with little links between them. There is a story, but it runs as an undercurrent to different self-contained chapters. I found this to be a little annoying, especially considering the fact that the main story doesn't really conclude itself. Okay, the project becomes something of a success, but then what?

An unlikely quest? Yes. I just wish it was a more vivid quest with a few good lessons learned.

Hem alright lelebit.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Class, I think it's important that I let you know at this stage that, as of the beginning of next year, you will be having a new French teacher," I said, staring down at my fingertips, which rested among the dusty slag heaps of paperwork on my desk. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Small Tome, Solomon Islands, Solomon Time, Chicken Willy, Deacon Hilary, Father Joshua, New Georgia, Robinson Crusoe, Solomon Islanders, South Pacific, Old Obadiah, Henry Fatty, Kiri Kiri, New Zealand, Red Beach, Western Province, Andrew's Day, The Australian, Vonavona Lagoon, Will Randall
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