
audiobook
by George S. (George Shepard) Chappell
THE CRUISE OF THE KAWA - WANDERINGS IN THE SOUTH SEAS - By Walter E. Traprock, F.R.S.S.E.U. - With Seventeen Illustrations And A Map - 1921
DEDICATION - TO THE GIRLS WE LEFT BEHIND— - KIPPIPUTUONA (DAUGHTER OF PEARL AND CORAL) - LUPOBA-TILAANA (MIST ON THE MOUNTAIN) - BABAI-ALOVA-BABAI (ESSENCE OF ALOVA) - THIS VOLUME IS LOVINGLY DEDICATED
ILLUSTRATIONS
CHAPTER I
CHAPTER II
CHAPTER III
CHAPTER IV
CHAPTER V
CHAPTER VI
CHAPTER VII
A vivid, first‑person chronicle follows a small yawl named Kawa as it slips through the bustling crossroads of the South Pacific—where the equator meets the 180th meridian. The narrator, a naturalist‑explorer, sets the scene with a blend of scientific precision and poetic wonder, inviting listeners to picture the glittering reefs, mist‑capped mountains, and the rhythm of island life that frames the voyage’s opening days.
The crew reads like a portrait of early‑20th‑century curiosity: Captain Ezra Triplett, ever pragmatic, steers through sudden storms and routine repairs; artist Herman Swank captures the landscape in striking sketches; scientist Reginald K. Whinney records flora, fauna, and cultural details with meticulous care. Their interactions with local families—especially the young women whose names echo the sea—add a personal, human dimension to the expedition’s scientific aims.
Interspersed with seventeen detailed illustrations and a hand‑drawn map, the narrative balances adventure with observation. Listeners will feel the deck’s sway, hear the gulls’ cries, and share the awe of discovering remote lagoons, all while the Kawa’s crew records the South Seas as they truly are—unfiltered, vibrant, and endlessly intriguing.
Language
en
Duration
~2 hours (134K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Etext produced by Phil McLaury, Juliet Sutherland, Charles Franks and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team. Illustrated html file produced by David Widger
Release date
2004-09-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
1877–1946
Best remembered for witty, globe-trotting parodies published under the name Walter E. Traprock, this American writer brought a playful, satirical touch to travel and society writing. He also moved comfortably between architecture, journalism, and humor, giving his books an unusually sharp eye for style and detail.
View all books
by George S. (George Shepard) Chappell, Frank Crowninshield, Dorothy Parker

by George S. (George Shepard) Chappell

by George S. (George Shepard) Chappell

by George S. (George Shepard) Chappell

by Royall Tyler

by Ben Jonson

by Friedrich Gerstäcker

by Ben Jonson