Among The Islands by Tim Flannery
Text Publishing $40
Parents wishing to change the attitude of their science-averse teenage boys could do worse than to drop into their Christmas stocking this account of Tim Flannery's adventures as a young zoologist. I quote: "before long I felt a firm breast resting on my shoulder and the warmth of a groin pressing into my side." And again: "A young woman was sluicing her body under the communal shower, the sun catching her curves so that she looked like a classical nymph."
These extracts come from a chapter on his stay with the Kwaio people of Malaita, whose unmarried young women go about completely naked.
In another passage, on Alcester Island, he describes being cared for by a fetching young woman in a grass skirt who comes and mops his body with a moist cloth while he is suffering an attack of malaria.
In fairness to Flannery he also points out the morality of the Kwaio is such that anyone attempting to seduce a naked nymph is likely to find a spear in his ribs and that the young Florence Nightingale in the grass skirt was merely exercising the kindness of strangers. Still, it all sounds rather more attractive than Business Studies 101.