<%@LANGUAGE="JAVASCRIPT" CODEPAGE="65001"%> The Golden Chersonese
    TRADE & GENERAL ART & DESIGN ACADEMIC CHILDREN'S TITLE SCHOOL SEARCH CONTACT US
             
HOME
NEW TITLES
THE ECONOMIST
PROFILE BOOKS
SERPENT'S TAIL
ASIA INTEREST
BUSINESS & SELF HELP
CRAFTS
DICTIONARIES
FICTION
FOOD & DRINK
GARDENING
GIFTS & HUMOUR
HOBBIES
LOCAL INTEREST
MAPS
MBS & HEALTH
NATURAL HISTORY
OTHER
PARENTING
PETS CARE
SPORTS
TRAVEL


ISBN 9789810844844
Publisher: Monsoon Books
Paperback: 352 pages
Pub Date: Jan 2010

S$23.50

The Golden Chersonese
Isabella Bird

In 1880, Isabella Bird visited the Malay Peninsula — romantically dubbed “The Golden Chersonese” — and was still able to refer to it as an almost unknown land. The world’s most famous female travel writer of the nineteenth century set sail from Japan and called at Hong Kong, Canton and Saigon before reaching Singapore. Bearing letters of introduction to the elite of Malacca and Penang, Bird was able to observe life on the west coast of the peninsula before steaming upriver through mangrove swamps to explore the interior of the land. From courtroom to elephant back, from the grandeur of Malacca’s Stadthuys to the jungle calm of a picturesque Malay village on stilts, this indefatigable Victorian explorer offers invaluable descriptions and delightful hand-drawn sketches of life in late nineteenth-century Singapore and the Malay Peninsula.