In 1858, fourteen-year-old French cabin boy Narcisse Pelletier was
aboard the trader Saint-Paul when it was wrecked off the eastern tip
of New Guinea.Scrambling into a longboat, Narcisse and the other
survivors crossed almost 1000 kilometres of the Coral Sea before
reaching the shores of Far North Queensland. If not for the local
Aboriginal people, Narcisse would have perished. For seventeen years he
lived with them, growing to manhood and participating fully in their
Uutaalnganu world. Then, in 1875, his life was again turned upside
down.Drawing from firsthand interviews with Narcisse after his return to
France and other contemporary accounts of exploration and survival, and
documenting the spread of European settlement in Queensland and the
brutal frontier wars that followed, Robert Macklin weaves an
unforgettable tale of a young man caught between two cultures in a time
of transformation and upheaval.