Sea People

The Puzzle of Polynesia

hardcover, 384 pages

Published March 12, 2019 by Harper.

ISBN:
978-0-06-206087-7
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OCLC Number:
1089397451

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A history of evolving understanding

I don't think I've ever read a book about the history of trying to answer a question. Christina Thompson looks in to all the different ways people throughout time have tried to understand the origins of the Polynesian people who live in the Pacific. The book covers legends, ethnographic research, archeology, linguistic research, carbon dating, geneology, and other methods. My favorite chapters were about people in the 1960s-70s trying to recreate old sailing vessels and navigating using a blend of ancient and modern navigational methods.

Review of 'Sea People' on 'Goodreads'

John McWhorter praised this book in his August 19, 2019 podcast of “Lexicon Valley”, on the Austronesian language family, stating that the book read like a novel and was delightful like Pringles at a party.

I.

Hate.

Pringles.

But the endorsement was so complete that I, who have long admired the Polynesian human miracle of setting the Pacific, and loved Michener’s retelling of the first settlement party from Bora Bora to the eponymous “Hawai‘i”, and had read a good bit of Kon-Tiki (the Norwegian dudes who rafted from Peru to the Tuamotus), and even suffered through the film Moana, had to pick up the book.

It is an absolute delight. There are so many topics that I wish I had as superb a teacher as Christina Thompson. She tells you up front that the book is about the sea people, but also about the story of what we know about …

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