Description: SCARCE (1913) EARLY EDITION NATURALIST BOOK, "MY TROPIC ISLE," BY E.J. BANFIELD A nice and clean early original edition (third printing, 2nd edition, 1913) by Banfield detailing the natural wonders found on Dunk Island, where he and his wife lived for 23 years. Used in very good condition commensurate with age. Loads of photographic images of natural features and wildlife encountered on this hitherto uncharted island off the coast of Australia. The boards, binding, and leaves are 100% correct. 315pp. Lovely period advertisements after the index. While there are reprints, this is your opportunity to own an original early edition published in London and sold in Glasgow. Edmund James Banfield (4 September 1852 – 2 June 1923) was an author and naturalist in Queensland, Australia. He is best known for his book Confessions of a Beachcomber. His grave on Dunk Island is listed on the Queensland Heritage Register.Banfield was born in Liverpool, England the son of Jabez Walter Banfield (1820–1899), a printer, and his wife Sarah Ann (née Smith). Banfield was brought while a boy to Australia by his father, who settled at Ararat, Victoria in 1852 and became proprietor of a newspaper, the Ararat Advertiser. Edmund Banfield received his first training in journalism on this paperBanfield had experience with newspapers in Melbourne and Sydney in the 1870s, and in 1882 went to Townsville, Queensland, where he became sub-editor of the Townsville Bulletin. In 1884 he visited England, the voyage providing the material for a pamphlet, The Torres Strait Route from Queensland to England (1885).Residence of E. J. Banfield on Dunk Island, 1935E. J. Banfield, The Beachcomber, with dog, Dunk Island, circa January 1913While in England, Banfield met his future wife, Bertha Golding, and they were married at Townsville in 1886. Banfield remained at the Townsville Bulletin until 1897 until he resigned, being diagnosed with tuberculosis and in a state of nervous collapse. Banfield and his deaf wife then settled on Dunk Island off the North Queensland coast. With his health improving, he obtained a 30-year lease of 129 ha (320 acres) of land on Dunk Island on 4 January 1900 and lived 23 more years of a comparatively solitary life. A house was constructed, fruit-trees and vegetables were planted; goats and cattle provided them with milk, butter and occasionally meat, and there were abundant fish in the surrounding seas. Most importantly there were the immense possibilities of the nature study which made up so much of the charm of his books. For nine months in 1901, Banfield took the place of a former colleague at Townsville who was travelling abroad. Except for occasional short holidays on the mainland, he spent the rest of his days on the island. In 1907 he wrote a tourists' guide for the Queensland government, Within the Barrier, and in 1908 appeared his Confessions of a Beachcomber which immediately gave him a place of his own among Australian writers. This was followed by My Tropic Isle (1911), and Tropic Days (1918). His Last Leaves from Dunk Island was published posthumously in 1925 in collaboration with Alec Chisholm and Bertha Banfield.The title of Banfield's first serious book, Confessions of a Beachcomber, was misleading; he was no mere collector of trifling tales or a beachcomber in the nineteenth century tradition of a ship-wrecked sailor. Although the suggestion for the title came from the breaking up of a wreck on the coast many miles away which resulted in much debris drifting to the island. He worked hard on his plantation, and in its early days he found that work on a tropical island had its own difficulties. Once these were overcome he could get enough leisure to study the vegetable, bird and sea life of the island, and, the Aborigines before they were taken away and placed on a reservation. Visitors came and were made welcome by Banfield and his wife.Banfield described Dunk Island as his "Isle of Dreams—this unkempt, unrestrained garden where the centuries gaze upon perpetual summer". He became ill towards the end of May 1923 and died on 2 June 1923 of peritonitis.
Price: 73.99 USD
Location: Saint Charles, Missouri
End Time: 2024-10-25T22:41:07.000Z
Shipping Cost: 5.38 USD
Product Images
Item Specifics
All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
Binding: Hardcover
Place of Publication: LONDON, UK
Signed: No
Publisher: T. FISHER UNWIN
Subject: LIFE ON A TROPIC ISLAND
Original/Facsimile: Original
Year Printed: 1913
California Prop 65 Warning: NA
Unit Type: Unit
Language: English
Illustrator: CAROLINE HORDERN
Special Attributes: Illustrated
Author: E.J. BANFIELD
Region: Australia, Oceania
Personalized: No
Topic: LIFE OF A NATURALIST ON A TROPIC ISLAND
Country/Region of Manufacture: United Kingdom
Unit Quantity: 1
Character Family: E.J. BANFIELD AND WIFE