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Informationen zum Autor Sarah Bakewell had a wandering childhood, growing up on the "hippie trail" through Asia and in Australia. She studied philosophy at the University of Essex, and worked for many years as a curator of early printed books at the Wellcome Library, London, before becoming a full-time writer. Her books include How to Live: a life of Montaigne , which won the Duff Cooper Prize and the US National Book Critics Circle Prize, and At the Existentialist Café , a New York Times Ten Best Books of 2016. She was also among the winners of the 2018 Windham-Campbell Literature Prize. She still has a tendency to wander, but is mostly to be found either in London or in Italy with her wife and their family of dogs and chickens. www.sarahbakewell.com Klappentext This gripping nineteenth-century adventure stars Jorgen Jorgenson who ran away to sea at fourteen and began a brilliant career by sailing to establish the first colony in Tasmania. Twists of fortune then found him captaining a warship for Napoleon before joining a British trading voyage to Iceland where he staged an outrageous coup and ruled the country for two months.Much lay ahead from imprisonment in the hulks to patronage by Joseph Banks and travels in Europe as a British spy. But Jorgenson was dogged by his own excesses and ended up transported as a convict to the very colony he helped to found. Here he reinvented himself again as an explorer and despite his sympathy for the people was caught up in the terrible Aboriginal clearances. Using unpublished sources and letters Sarah Bakewell tells his astonishing tale with dazzling verve. Zusammenfassung This gripping nineteenth-century adventure stars Jorgen Jorgenson, who ran away to sea at fourteen and began a brilliant career by sailing to establish the first colony in Tasmania.