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Books to read if you're planning a vacation in "tonga", sorted by average review score:

Obscure kingdoms
Published in Unknown Binding by Hamilton ()
Author: Edward Fox
Average review score:

Small Countries for a Small Reader
As a small person (4'10"), I have always had a fondness for small countries. As a geographer, I enjoy knowing about places most people have never heard of. And as a veteran armchair traveller... Well, this book could hardly miss with me. Edward Fox sets out to explore the mysteries of royalty by visiting a half-dozen small, non-European kingdoms and attempting to meet their respective kings, with varying success. Dressed in his official king-meeting costume of a blue Brooks Brothers suit and tie, Fox meets with royal responses that cover the spectrum: casual affability in Tonga, fierce hostility in Swaziland, democratic divinity on Java. Meeting King Taufa'ahau Tupou IV of Tonga was a snap. Fox simply made an appointment for an interview. He could also observe the King on His Majesty's daily royal bicycle ride cum motorcade. On the other hand, he spent weeks chasing after Sultan Qaboos of Oman as the King made tours and military inspections up and down his nation. Finally Fox gave up hope of an interview, contenting himself with a bow and a limp handshake in a receiving line. Fox met a fair number of Yourba kings, of whom there are roughly 700 in all of Nigeria. Having lost their temporal power to the central government, they are primarily leaders of traditional Yourba religion. Yet kings are usually chosen on the basis of wealth and professional background, not for their knowledge of and belief in these traditions. The Ataoja of Oshogbo was a well-educated, devout Muslim, and thus found himself caught in a serious spiritual dilemma. Besides his own religious duties, his daughter was required by tradition to be high priestess of Oshun, the Yourba Venus, and preside at the goddess's annual festival. Another Royal Annoyance was an Austrian sculptress and sincere devotee of the Yourba gods who, during her 40-year residence in Oshogbo has made the town the cultural capital of Yourba, turned Oshun's grove into a sculpture garden, and erected (if you'll pardon the expression) an ithyphallic statue on the palace grounds. Not the sort of decoration a pious Muslim usually wants to see in his front yard. A monarch's lot is not a happy one! Swaziland turned out to be downright hostile. On his request for an interview, Fox was told, "I have just been in England. I didn't see the Queen Mother. Do you think I could have seen the Queen Mother just like that?" The author's only sight of King Mswati II was at the performance of a long, boring public ritual ("Take your hands out of your pockets and stand still!" he was scolded after about two hours). But he did manage to meet Maja II, king of the Mamba clan, whose ancestor was given royal title and dignity by Mswati II's ancestor in 1819. Most Swazis don't know he exists, and the Mamba kingship is omitted from all official Swazi histories. Fox met Maja II at His Anonomyous Majesty's butcher shop, where they had a chat and a smoke, and Fox took a photo of the King posing beside his pickup truck. Fox's last royal pilgrimage was to the island of Java and Hamengkubuwono X, Sultan of Yogyakarta, whose kingship has become entirely spiritual. As a disciple hoping to be accepted by a guru, Fox knew his quest would require patience. He moved into a hotel where no one spoke English, took no tourist excursions, bought no souvenirs, and settled down to read "War and Peace" while waiting for his contacts to turn something up. Step by step, contact by contact, Fox closed in on his goal: a highly formal interview, with interpreter, in which the Sultan was as democratic as he could manage. He wasn't exactly Maja II with his pickup, but he went so far as to acknowledge and show interest in Fox's gift, which is more than the cycling Taufa'ahau of Tonga did. Our last glimpse of Hamengkubuwono X is of His Majesty enthusiastically playing soccer in the rain, and afterward handing out gifts of soccer balls and jerseys to his subjects and fellow-players.


A Simplified Dictionary of Modern Tongan
Published in Paperback by Polynesian Pr (June, 1992)
Authors: Edgar Tu'Inukuafe and Robert G. Holding
Average review score:

Helpful Tongan Dictionary
I purchased this book while in the Tonga Islands. As an American married to a Tongan who is bi-lingual, this book is the most comprehensive I have seen. My son and I are always looking up words, and have never had a word we have not been able to find. It is extremely helpful to us, and also my husband, who has lived in the U.S. for 20+ years - sometimes he forgets his own language.


Ancient Tonga & the Lost City of Mu'A: Including Samoa, Fiji, & Rarotonga (Lost Cities of the Pacific Series)
Published in Paperback by Adventures Unlimited Press (December, 1996)
Author: David Hatcher Childress
Average review score:

interesting, but no classic
Good compilation of information (as you can probably judge from the 5-page bibliography), but not much of a leisurely read. Discusses possible origin of the polynesians, ancient ruins found on the said islands, as well as legends and artifacts passed on through generations. The author manages to touch alot of topics, but as a general interest book, it just doesn't work.

Links to Polynesian Presence in Americas
Childress has uncovered a deep Pacific base for ancient navigators,
who were much more likely the ancestors of American megalithic
builders than the posited but unlikely survivors of a Berengia
migration to the New World -- even though academic texts still fondly
describe ice-age hunters following wandering caribou over thousands of
miles of thick icesheets where neither the hunters nor the hunted
would have had anything to eat.

Insight into early Polynesian Culture
This book takes the reader into the maritime realm of the first seafarers of the Pacific Ocean. Most fascinating of the ancient cith of Mu where the first pan-Pacific maritime university trained sailing fleets to discover and chart this very ancient part of the world. Delves a little bit into possible ties with Lemuria and other lost lands of the Pacific.


An Account of the Natives of the Tonga Islands in the South Pacific Ocean (2 Volume Set)
Published in Hardcover by AMS Press (April, 1975)
Author: William Mariner
Average review score:
No reviews found.

An account of the natives of the Tonga Islands in the South Pacific Ocean : with an original grammar and vocabulary of their language
Published in Unknown Binding by AMS Press ()
Author: William Mariner
Average review score:
No reviews found.

Agrarstruktur in Tonga : eine sozial- und wirtschaftsgeographische Analyse der Relation von Landrecht und Landnutzung im Kontext wachsender Marktorientierung am Beispiel eines Inselstaates in Südpazifik
Published in Unknown Binding by Edition-Herodot ()
Author: Hans-Jürgen Wiemer
Average review score:
No reviews found.

Agreement Between the Government of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland and the Government of the Kingdom of Tonga for the Promotion and Protection of Investments: London, 22 October 1997 (Cm.: Treaty Series: 1997: 3800: No. 71)
Published in Paperback by The Stationery Office Books (1997)
Average review score:
No reviews found.

Appropriating Old Cultures into New Futures: From the Kingdom of Tonga to California
Published in Hardcover by Professional Press (June, 1995)
Author: Geraldine Cynthia Forte
Average review score:
No reviews found.

Archaeology of Tonga (Bayard Dominick Expedition, Publication No, 15)
Published in Paperback by Periodicals Service Co (January, 1971)
Author: W. C. McKern
Average review score:
No reviews found.

ART OF TONGA
Published in Hardcover by Fine Art Publishing ()
Author: Fine Art Publishing
Average review score:
No reviews found.

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