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This Thing of Darkness [Paperback]

Harry Thompson
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Book Description

Jan 16 2006
This is an epic novel of sea-faring adventure set in the 19th century charting the life of Robert Fitzroy, the captain of 'The Beagle' and his passenger Charles Darwin. It combines adventure, emotion, ideas, humour and tragedy as well as illuminating the history of the 19th century. Fitzroy, the Christian Tory aristocrat, believed in the sanctity of the individual, but his beliefs destroyed his career, and he committed suicide. Darwin, the liberal minor cleric doubts the truth of the "Bible" and develops his theory of evolution which is brutal and unforgiving in human terms. The two friends became bitter enemies as Darwin destroyed everything Fitzroy stood for.

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From the Publisher

Shortlisted for The Pendleton May First Novel Award 2005 Longlisted for The Man Booker Prize 2005

About the Author

Harry Thompson was a highly successful television producer 'Have I Got News for You, They Think It's All Over, Never Mind the Buzzcocks' and the author of a number of non-fiction bestsellers 'Peter Cook, The Biography'. He wrote for most of the national newspapers, especially on travel, and was nominated for Travel Journalist of the Year. He died in November 2005.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
By J. Cameron-Smith TOP 50 REVIEWER
Format:Paperback
The suicide of a British naval captain in 1828 while charting Tierra Del Feugo leads to the appointment of Robert FitzRoy as the commander of the Beagle. He advertises for a ship's naturalist, and Charles Darwin is appointed.

Robert FitzRoy is a gifted leader of men and a brilliant lateral thinker but is also prone to episodes of deep despair (presented, most likely, as bi-polar depression)

In this novel, which is based on history, Thompson explores ideas and relationships. Initially at least, this is as a naval adventure story which combines episodes of violence, danger and catastrophe.

When Darwin and FitzRoy part company, the story moves more deeply into the politics of influence and of conflicting beliefs. On one level(but not entirely consistent with the history)neither man is as fully developed individually as they are whilst operating as a team on the Beagle.

I found the story of FitzRoy more interesting, but probably because I know less about him. I suspect that dealing with two larger than life characters became more challenging once their spheres of influence became more separate and once 'known fact' impinged more on the story itself.

This is a marvellous novel. It combines adventure, history, discovery and human weaknesses in a way which left me wanting to know more about both men and wondering, too, about the power of coincidence in life.

Sadly, Harry Thompson died last year (7 November 2005)aged only 45.

Highly recommended.

Jennifer Cameron-Smith
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars The Beagle's Boys Feb 18 2007
By Stephen A. Haines HALL OF FAME TOP 100 REVIEWER
Format:Hardcover
At the age of but 23 Robert FitzRoy mounted the deck of HMS Beagle as its captain. The ship was called a "coffin brig" for its inability to resist a combination of high seas and cross-winds. FitzRoy's apparent youth belied his long Naval experience - experience that would save the Beagle more than once. A British aristocrat of long lineage, that background didn't prevent him, as it did some, from bearing an enormous sense of responsibility for the ship's crew. When he was firm, it was for a reason, and the crew responded with rare loyalty. The Beagle's job was surveying the South American coast. That assignment and the need for a way to alleviate the captain's isolation set in train a momentous string of events. Under his tutelage, many of the Beagle's junior officers went on to noteworthy careers in later life. It's commendable that a fiction writer went to such effort to track down this information.

There's an ongoing debate - sometimes rancorous - over the value of "historical fiction". Some claim it misleading, while others contend it brings to "life" figures often condemned to academic obscurity. Whatever the merits of converting history into fiction, in the hands of the proper writer, the effect can be illuminating. It certainly is with this excellent work. Thompson lifts the figure of FitzRoy from near obscurity - and sometime derision - transforming him into a figure of notable stature. The author breathes life into the man who sought to be Charles Darwin's nemesis. In the process Thompson shows that FitzRoy was a figure of high complexity, and not the dogmatist some histories have portrayed him.

Thompson has no choice but to make Darwin something of a foil to the naval commander, although Darwin was just a few years younger than FitzRoy. It was Darwin's observations, and his reliance on the geological work of Charles Lyell, that led to questioning of the Biblical Flood. From that erosion of a major theme in the thinking of the early 19th Century, an entirely new science would be founded. From that step, a new view of life itself would also emerge. FitzRoy, even while submersed in his navel duties, understood the challenge to his own beliefs perfectly. His responses to Darwin's challenges are well expressed by Thompson's portrayal. FitzRoy, for example, is depicted as far less of a Victorian Era racist than Darwin, yet defended slavery as a means of "civilising" and "uplifting" those savage people who had been brought to South American shores. To FitzRoy, all men lived under the auspices of his deity. A life of slavery could be redeemed in paradise.

FitzRoy carried a stigma, which Thompson deals with effectively. The former captain of the Beagle had committed suicide. FitzRoy's own uncle had sliced his throat, and he was subjected to periods of dark depression. At one point, FitzRoy resigned his command, feeling unfit to meet the challenge of his assignment. Convinced to retain the post, he carried out further work in some haste. The return trip around the globe to England took only 18 months of a five-year voyage. Thompson, however, is in no hurry and develops the parallel lives of Darwin and FitzRoy fully. The development is rewarding as we learn it was Robert FitzRoy who initiated serious meteorological studies of the British Isles and published a weather forecasting service to protect the lives of fisherman and naval and commercial sailors.

FitzRoy, aware of where Charles Darwin's speculations in South America might lead him, and depressed by the vagaries of both public attention and the Admiralty's indifference, turns more inward, seeking solace in his Bible. He considers it the ultimate truth, and in a speculative confrontation, Thompson has FitzRoy and Darwin thrash out their different views on last time. After publication of The Origin of Species, FitzRoy raised his final objections. Not long afterward, the captain followed his uncle's example and took his life.

It's difficult to praise this book sufficiently. Thompson has undertaken a tremendous task and fulfilled it brilliantly. Knowing how "it all turns out" is of small consequence when reading this book. The author's skill in building the characters, his obvious sympathy for a tragic figure and his knowledge of events and attitudes of the characters and the times make this a most rewarding read. [stephen a. haines - Ottawa, Canada]
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Darwin, FitzRoy, and the World Feb 25 2006
By M. Yakiwchuk TOP 100 REVIEWER
Format:Paperback
This Thing of Darkness follows Robert Fitzroy and the crew of the HMS Beagle through three journeys: The first trip is to Tierra Del Fuego, the southernmost tip of South America, located in present-day Argentina. Harry Thompson writes of a desolate, inhospitable land, populated by the Fuegians - called "savages" in the book. Three of the Fuegians are brought back to Great Britain, where they learn English, the Scriptures, and "proper manners". The three, named Fuegia Basket, York Minster, and Jemmy Button, work their way into the reader's heart as she reads of their hopes, dreams, and adventures in Britain and Tierra Del Fuego. The second and third trips feature British naturalist and future evolutionary proponent Charles Darwin (The Origin of Species). There are many entertaining passages of conversations between FitzRoy, who believes in Creationism, and Darwin, who later founded the theory of "natural selection". What's surprising is that both FitzRoy and Darwin make points in favour of both Evolution and Creationism that are understandable and relevant to today's reader. For instance, while Darwin subscribes to the stories told in the Bible, he's sceptical of taking a literal interpretation of the story of Noah's ark: "Please. My dear FitzRoy, I do not doubt the majesty of God's creation for one instant. But a wooden vessel, stocked with pairs of animals by a six-hundred-year-old man?" In the end, the reader gains greater appreciation for the reinforcing roles of religion and science in telling the story of the world as we know it.

I recommend This Thing of Darkness to readers young and old who want to read an engaging story of adventure, exploration, and discovery. 5/5

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