Dear Customer, we will be closed for the holidays from December 25th until January 2nd. Make sure to place your orders before December 18th!

My Cart

loader
Loading...

The Last Navigator

A Young Man, an Ancient Mariner, the Secrets of the Sea


  • Abbeville Press (ACC)
  • by Steve Thomas, David Barrie
The classic account of traditional Micronesian navigation and "the last navigator," Mau Piailug, who fought to preserve it-now available in a revised edition illustrated in full color.

ISBN 9780789215079 | EN | HB
€33,95
not yet published
Quantity
More Information
Publisher Abbeville Press (ACC)
ISBN 9780789215079
Author(s) by Steve Thomas, David Barrie
Publication date April 2025
Edition Hardback
Dimensions 228 x 152 mm
Pages 336
Language(s) English ed.
extra information Revised Edition
Publisher ISBN 9780789215116 (PB)
Description

The classic account of traditional Micronesian navigation and "the last navigator," Mau Piailug, who fought to preserve it-now available in a revised edition illustrated in full color.

As a young man piloting a small sailboat across the Pacific, Steve Thomas developed a fascination with ancient methods of navigation. He learned that, for thousands of years, the peoples of Oceania had sailed unerringly across the Pacific without compass or charts, guided only by natural signs-stars, waves, and the flight paths of birds. In search of this secret knowledge, Thomas traveled to the tiny island of Satawal in Micronesia, home to Mau Piailug, one of the few surviving paliuw, or navigators. In The Last Navigator, Thomas tells how he convinced Piailug to accept him as his student and teach him the closely guarded Talk of Navigation. It is a remarkable book, offering at once a clear and precise account of Micronesian wayfinding and the moving story of one man trying to preserve his culture against the tide of modernity.

Now, forty years after his original journey to study under Mau Piailug, Thomas has worked with a new generation of researchers, including natives of Satawal, to prepare this revised edition of The Last Navigator. All Satawalese words are rendered in the now-accepted orthography, and the islanders, originally identified by pseudonyms, appear under their true names. And throughout, Thomas has added a generous selection of color photographs from his time on Satawal, documenting the island, its people, and its seafaring culture. This result is a lasting tribute to the spirit of the Satawalese, and to the Talk of Navigation.