P.S. Donna has also since packed it in, but her own beautiful story is still here.
This tiny building on the shores of Burrill Lake - remember Burrill Lake, Rob? - was originally the office for a car sales yard, after which it became the Pigeon House Opportunity Shop, where everything was priced at ten or twenty cents.
Which is where my story starts because I simply cannot resist op-shops, and while I pick up a fair amount of dross, I do find the occasional gem. On this occasion, many years ago, I found a battered paperback for which I paid ten cents but which literally - should that be literaturely? - changed my life or, more to the point, the way I look at life.
The paperback was Tom Neale's "An Island to Oneself", a book long since out of print which, if you're lucky enough to find a hardback copy on ebay or amazon, you're likely to pay several hundred dollars for it - in short, it has become a collector's item.
To me, Tom Neale's book has become priceless and I have read and re-read many times, and I am surprised that, in this visual age, it hasn't already been made into a movie. And, in the same way that it was the American author Robert Dean Frisbie who brought Tom Neale to Suwarrow Island (I am assuming that by now you have read Tom Neale's story), it was the reading of Tom Neale's book that brought me to Robert Dean Frisbie's books "The Book of Puka-Puka" and "The Island of Desire" and "My Tahiti" which have become classics in their own right.
Which brings me to "Mr. Moonlight of the South Seas" by Brandon Oswald who sets out to examine the life of Robert Dean Frisbie ("Mr Moonlight") who, at the age of twenty-four, left the United States for the unknown adventurous ports of the Pacific Islands in the early 1920s.
He first landed in Papeete, Tahiti, which at the time was a bustling town and the start-off point for many visitors to the region. He would stay a few years learning the Tahitian language, culture, and way of life. He enjoyed sharing his experiences in numerous articles for U.S. publications such as the Atlantic Monthly.
Frisbie was fascinated with the number of characters that lived or frequently visited the island. These included Tahitians, sea captains, beachcombers and writers. He would often refer to these characters in his stories. His most notable friend was James Norman Hall, who would eventually co-author the Bounty Trilogy. For the remainder of his life, Hall remained one of the few people in whom Frisbie would confide his inner-most thoughts. On their first meeting in Papeete, Frisbie was mesmerized by the setting and the different boats in port. He told Hall, "All these ships.... I suppose you can go almost anywhere from here?"
Frisbie's daughter, Florence, wrote "Miss Ulysses from Puka Puka" when she was 13 to 14 years old. It was published in 1948 when she was 15. The book has been out of print for more than seventy years. Used copies sell for $200-plus on the internet. A 2nd edition, available on ebay (and also ordered by me), contains the original book, plus family photos and two new chapters. For a preview, click here.
After four years on Tahiti, Frisbie began to take his writing career more seriously and craved finding an isolated island where he could dedicate most of his time to writing his great novel, which he called his "Moby Dick." He settled on the lonely atoll known as Pukapuka in the Cook Islands. He got to know the islanders and their language, customs, and lifestyles. He eventually immortalized the island and some of the characters he knew in many sketches, articles and essays. Several of the pieces were collected and made into his most famous book titled "The Book of Puka-Puka".
Although writing occupied much of his time, Frisbie lived the life of an islander without, however, becoming what he termed, "native." He believed it was very important to respect the culture of the islanders around him by continuing to acknowledge his separate upbringing. That said, he did enjoy participating in island activities such as fishing, canoeing, and house building. Eventually, Frisbie would marry a Pukapukan girl named Ngatokorua, and together the couple would have five children. His family changed his life and created additional challenges and adventures.
The years of living on this lonely atoll would take its toll on Frisbie's health and mind. He could easily go months without talking to another European man, and sometimes a year would pass between ships visiting the island. Frisbie was forced to sail away from Pukapuka due to family tragedies, poor health and a yearning to see other islands. He took his family to Tahiti, Fiji, Samoa, and Rarotonga. During his South Seas travels, he and his children barely survived a monster cyclone on the island of Suwarrow.
Despite his wandering, Frisbie returned to Pukapuka on several occasions in the hope of reviving some stability with his family. Frisbie was also constantly trying to justify his choice of lifestyle - simple, yet unpredictable, at a time when not many people had the courage to do so. He never lost faith in writing his "Moby Dick"; and he continued to write articles for American magazines. Before his death in 1948 at the age of 52, Frisbie would publish six very fascinating books that memorialized the people and cultures of this very unique part of the world. For more information on Frisbie's life, click here.
I've found a copy of "Mr. Moonlight of the South Seas" and ordered it. Thank you, ebay! And thank you, Pigeon House Opportunity Shop, for having helped to point me in this direction oh so many years ago!
Some of Robert Frisbie's book are available online:
The Island of Desire
The Book of Puka-Puka
My Tahiti
The Frisbies of the South Seas
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