The Friendly Islanders: A story of Queen Salote and her people (Tonga: A Polynesian Trilogy)
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The Friendly Islanders: A story of Queen Salote and her people (Tonga: A Polynesian Trilogy)
Reviews:
Whitcomb’s New Zealand Book Of The Month, July 1967. New Zealand Women’s Weekly Book Of The Week, July 1967. "A delightful blend of fact, folklore and fantasy, with a stimulating vein of humour throughout. I could read it all over again." Jack Hackett, Public Relations Director, Fiji "Urbane, witty and judicious, it will form an indispensable part of our permanent South Pacific literature." Lindsay Verrier, MLC, Fiji "Much of the charm and gentle humour of Sir Arthur Grimble’s ’Pattern of Islands.’ An authoritative work with an underlying effervescence that appeals." Irish Times "Richly comic with a pleasantly detached irony and felicity of style." New Zealand Broadcasting Corporation Book Review "A book to buy for keeps, it is an example of modern ‘book beauty.’" The Bookman, London "It gave me real pleasure. The best book on Tonga that I have ever read." R.W. Robson, Publisher, Pacific Publications, Sydney "Told with a wealth of appreciation and humour." Church Times, London "A book to be proud of." News of the World, London "Hilarious anecdotes, breezily related. A beautifully written, informative work and all so—well—friendly." The Star, Johannesburg
About the Author:
KENNETH BAIN was born in New Zealand in 1923, and educated at Auckland Grammar School, Auckland University College and Corpus Christi College, Oxford. He was appointed to the Colonial Administrative Service in 1946 and assigned to Palestine as an Assistant District Commissioner in Gaza. After transfer to Fiji in 1949, he began his long association with the island peoples of the South Pacific, the Caribbean, and South Atlantic; and has travelled widely throughout all three regions. He was Secretary to the Government of Tonga 1953-56; Commissioner, British South Pacific Office in Fiji, including responsibility for Pitcairn, 1965-70; Deputy High Commissioner for Fiji in London 1970-75; a Director at the Commonwealth Secretariat in London 1975-80; then for five years, Financial Secretary and , for a period, Deputy Governor in the British Virgin Islands. He has also been Director of Studies in Financial Management at the Royal Institute of Public Administration in London. In close to 60 years, Kenneth Bain has written eleven well-received books. They include seven with worldwide island themes, including three on the South Pacific Kingdom of Tonga and its people. There is one each on Fiji, St Helena, British Virgin Islands, and Pitcairn, together with books on schizophrenia, Doggerel Ditties in the style of Ogden Nash, Obituaries he wrote for the London newspaper The Independent, and Gaza, his Palestine mandate diary 1946-48. He now lives on Tortola in the British Virgin Islands, where he and his wife were made Honorary Belongers in 1985. His wife Margaret Angaʻaefonu is part-Tongan; their three children were born in Tonga and Fiji. He was awarded the OBE in 1976, and appointed by King George Tupou V of Tonga to be Grand Cross of the Royal Order of Queen Salote Tupou III in 2010.