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The Mystery of Easter Island (Mystic Travellers Series) Paperback – February 1, 1998
Purchase options and add-ons
- Print length404 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherAdventures Unlimited Press
- Publication dateFebruary 1, 1998
- Dimensions6.25 x 1 x 9.25 inches
- ISBN-100932813488
- ISBN-13978-0932813480
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find the book very informative and well-researched. They describe it as an interesting, fun read with numerous drawings and photographs. However, some readers report issues with the pacing, reproduction illustrations, and page layout. Opinions are mixed on the writing style, with some finding it folksy and light, while others say it's full of typos and missing punctuation.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the book very informative, well-researched, and interesting. They say it's the best book on the subject and a true reflection of the thoughts and opinions of the time period. Readers also mention it provides a good look at life on a yacht and the culture of some ports in South America.
"...resemble a Jules Verne novel, only it really happened and was dutifully reported and the reader can look at the photos and admire the detailed..." Read more
"...And, of course, the research, discoveries and descriptions of the figures was fascinating...." Read more
"...In addition, it's a great look into the culture of some of the ports of South America and of Easter Island prior to a lot of contact with white..." Read more
"...Spent a little bit of time off the subject but otherwise very informative." Read more
Customers find the book interesting, fun, and worth reading. They appreciate the numerous drawings and photographs. Readers also mention the book is a fascinating adventure that they feel they're part of.
"...The book is greatly enhanced by the addition of numerous drawings and photographs from the voyage...." Read more
"Would recommend to anyone. Very fun book overall. Spent a little bit of time off the subject but otherwise very informative." Read more
"...The “Expedition” was very commendable for the time and the knowledge, very good but the way presented made it boring and difficult to follow...." Read more
"...With that said, just a fascinating adventure that I felt I was part of. Learned lots. Highly recommend book." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the writing style. Some mention it's folksy, light, and enjoyable. Others say it's full of typos and missing punctuation.
"...being stranger than the fiction. The book is written in a very folksy light manner that was typical of many 1919 publications...." Read more
"...chapters, related by the main author's husband, is told in a livelier style which is enjoyable, even if of much less significance." Read more
"...I originally read this book on my Kindle. It was full of typos and missing so much punctuation that I had to read many phrases and sentences again...." Read more
"Katherine Pease Routledge writes with clarity, a little humor, and kindness...." Read more
Customers find the pacing of the book poor. They mention the reproduced illustrations are of poor quality, the page layout is clunky, and the pictures are small and unclear.
"...I also felt the pictures were small and unclear, but that could have just been the fault of my Kindle Fire...." Read more
"...The page layout is a bit clunky. Clearly no one at the publisher took any care in the preparation of this...." Read more
"...This version ends midway through chapter XIV. The reproduced illustrations are of poor quality as well. Really should be rated 0 stars" Read more
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Top reviews from the United States
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The book is written in a very folksy light manner that was typical of many 1919 publications. Katherine Routledge and her husband "decided to see the Pacific before we died, and asked the anthropological authorities at the Britsh Museum what work there remained to be done, the answer was, `Easter Island.'" So in 1910 this wealthy couple decides to mount an exhibition to Easter Island. The first step is to build a 90-foot custom designed yacht in which to make the journey that they named "Mana." The Royal Navy "lent the Expedition a Lieutenant on full pay for navigation and survey." By this time the reader has a pretty good idea that Katherine Routledge wasn't a typical British citizen who wanted to go on a little ocean adventure. She seems more like a character out of Jules Verne science fiction novel. This may have been a scientific journey, but the expedition traveled in typical British Empire comfort.
Katherine Maria Pease Routledge was the second child of a very wealthy Quaker Family who decided to become an archaeologist. Her travel adventure is wonderfully related in this nearly 400-page reprint of the original 1919 book. The book is greatly enhanced by the addition of numerous drawings and photographs from the voyage. Routledge and her husband had previously published a book on the Kikuyu people of East Africa called "With a Prehistoric People."
Routledge, because of the time she arrived and researched the island was able to interview many people and study many traditions (such as tattooing) and works of art that had disappeared by the time later scientists arrived to study the island, its culture and the mysterious stone monuments the "Moai."
So typical of the glory years of the British Empire, lots of odd things happened even after the expedition ended. "The Royal Cruising Club Challenge Cup...was in 1917, awarded to `Mana" on her return...for a remarkable cruise of the Pacific." The two Pitcairners who joined the return voyage to England, who spoke "the pure Elizabethan English of the Bible and Prayer Book" were introduced to King George and Queen Mary and later provided passage back to the smallest colony of the British Empire.
"Only in England" could be applied to this story. It's a fascinating, fun read. It really does resemble a Jules Verne novel, only it really happened and was dutifully reported and the reader can look at the photos and admire the detailed drawings as well as read the written account.
This book begins with the preparations for the trip. I assumed that there was a grant that paid all the expenses, but later learned that she was from a very wealthy family and paid for the building of their 90 foot yacht and, I assume, most of the travel costs which must have been considerable at the time.
The preparations for the trip were extremely interesting to me as were the details of their voyage to Easter Island. And, of course, the research, discoveries and descriptions of the figures was fascinating. I have to admit I zoned out at the attempts at interviewing the elderly Easter Island inhabitants of the island to try to get more information as to where they originally came from and old customs and what the ancient writing actually said. Her guesses as to what the unreliable interviews meant bothered me as too unscientific.
I originally read this book on my Kindle. It was full of typos and missing so much punctuation that I had to read many phrases and sentences again. I also felt the pictures were small and unclear, but that could have just been the fault of my Kindle Fire. I ended up ordering the book so that I could see the pictures more clearly. I am pretty sure the paper book would seem much more coherent also. I just received the book today and while paging through it didn't see all the typos and punctuation errors. This book is available at this time in a paperback version for less than the hardcover edition.
In addition to the paper book I ordered the Katherine Routledge biography. I am anxious to learn more about her life.
If you have any interest in Easter Island and the amazing statues I would definitely get this book. I hope to go there one day.
Top reviews from other countries
Aunque se hace un poco pesado, querrás leerlo si has visitado la isla




