The Last Longhouse
English


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About The Book

With Her Adventure Memoir The Last Longhouse Anna Goins Adds To The Vast And Fascinating Body Of Literature By Intrepid Women Travelers Originating In The Nineteenth Century With Such Figures As Isabelle Eberhardt. What Distinguished The Last Longhouse Is That Its Heroine Was 62 Years Of Age When She Threw Over The Traces Of Life As An Academic Wife To Adventure Alone And Disguised As A Man Into Uncharted Dyak Territory. Gifted With The Awareness And Sense Of Risk Derived From Her First Experiences Accompanying Her Anthropologist Husband In His Field Work In The High Andes She Was Able To Make Contact With The Original Head Hunters Of Borneo And Live Among Them Observing Their Traditional Way Of Life To Share With Us This Rare Account. Cecile Pineda Author Of Face Winner Of The Commonwealth Club Gold Medal Looking For A Piece Of Paradise To Allay A Childhood Memory A Sixty-Two Year Old American Widow Travels Alone Into Borneo With A Weeks Supply Of Food And A Hand-Drawn Map To Make Her Way Up The Mahakam River And Into The Forbidden Territory Of The Dyak Headhunters. After Making Arrangements With A Chinese Timber Contractor To Gain Passage On An Indonesian Launch Anna'S Trip Is Officially Endorsed By Confusion When Her Travel Papers Are Stamped Laki-Laki (Male) At An Indonesian Army Checkpoint. No Woman Is Allowed To Travel Unaccompanied On The Mahakam River. Her Unknown Destination Is Rukun Damai Near The Mahakam Headwaters An Isolated Settlement Where The Dyak Live Communally In Traditional Longhouses. Anna Discovers How Fiercely Protective These People Are Of Their Way Of Life When She Receives An Aggressively Chilly Reception Undoubtedly Influenced By Her Necessary Reliance On Out-Siders To Make Her Way Up The River. During The Three-Day Stay Granted By The Patinggi The Dyak Headman Recognizes Anna'S Sincere Interest In His People And Invites Her To Stay In His Longhouse. Here She Is Allowed To Celebrate Their Life And While Learning To Dance To
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