
WHERE THE TWAIN MEET - By Mary Gaunt - Author of “Alone in West Africa,” “A Woman in China,” “A Broken Journey,” “The Uncounted Cost,” etc. - London: John Murray, Albemarle Street, W. 1 - 1922
TO - MY FRIEND - MRS LANG - I gratefully dedicate this book.
PREFACE
WHERE THE TWAIN MEET
CHAPTER I—BRITAIN'S FIRST TROPICAL COLONY
CHAPTER II—THE WHITE BONDSMEN
CHAPTER III—JAMAICA'S FIRST HISTORIAN
CHAPTER IV—THE CASTLES ON THE GUINEA COAST
CHAPTER V—THE MIDDLE PASSAGE
CHAPTER VI—THE PLANTATION
Set against the humid, sun‑baked fields of early nineteenth‑century Jamaica, the story follows a young woman who arrives from Europe with hopes of wealth and adventure. Through her eyes we encounter the brutal reality of plantation life, the tension between white planters and the African laborers they force into bondage, and the lingering myths of treasure left by the Spanish. The narrative weaves personal letters with vivid descriptions of the island’s landscape, offering a poignant glimpse of a world where ambition and survival clash.
The prose balances historical detail with intimate reflections, allowing listeners to feel the heat of the tropics and the weight of moral dilemmas faced by each character. As relationships form and loyalties are tested, the novel asks what it means to belong to a place that is both beautiful and unforgiving. Its lyrical voice and measured pace make it an absorbing journey for anyone interested in the human stories hidden behind colonial history.
Language
en
Duration
~9 hours (561K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by David Widger from page images generously provided by the Internet Archive
Release date
2017-03-21
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1861–1942
A bold Australian novelist and travel writer, she turned her years of journeying through Europe, Africa, China, and the West Indies into lively fiction and vivid travel books. Her work often carries the energy of adventure, curiosity, and hard-won independence.
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