
Deeper Than Indigo: Tracing Thomas Machell, Forgotten Explorer
Caroline Stone
Jenny Balfour Paul
2015, Medina Publishing, 978-1-90933-953-8, 22.99 hb
Englishman Thomas Machell set off to seek his fortune in the East in the mid-19th century when he was just 16. He traveled widely in India, where he became an indigo (and later a coffee) planter; Polynesia, where he fell in love with a cheiftain's daughter; China, where he witnessed the First Opium War; and the Middle East, where he had numberous adventures from Yemen to Suez. This strange and compelling recounting of Machell's life by probably the world's foremost expert on indigo is based in large part on five illustrated diary volumes covering the years 1840–1856 that lay half-forgotten in the British Library until they were brought to the author's attention because of their link to indigo. In this tour de force, Balfour Paul interweaves her own travels and adventures in search of Machell into the story, bringing her subject back to life as she identifies ever more closely with him. The book's many illustrations—his and hers—add a great deal to the narrative.
You may also be interested in...
Book Deconstructs Myth Surrounding Egypt’s Most-Famous Boy King
Egyptologist Aidan Dodson sifts the evidence—from tomb paintings to statuary to temple inscriptions—in his quest to recover the real King Tutankhamun.Dissolved Monopoly’s Legacy Hinges on How India Honors Its Political Architecture
From the first fortified trading post in northeastern India, historian Rosie Llewellyn-Jones tracks the physical changes wrought by the English East India Company.Revaluating 16th-century Ottoman Conquest of Tunisia
Although Ottomans invaded Northern Africa in 1534, the true conquest came in the following decades as settlers arrived from across the Ottoman Empire.