An intriguing book. An historical novel based on a true story. Annamarie Jagose creates a detailed backdrop to an early 19th century scandal involving a gay missionary (Yate) who, in the course of a three month voyage from Gravesend to Sydney, falls in love with a sailor and becomes sexually involved. When the affair becomes known the consequences are dire, but the two men’s love is undiminished. The threat of capital punishment, foreshadowed early in the book, hangs over Yate. Most of the action of the novel occurs on the voyage, and is only in the last 40 or so pages that the book’s themes fully play out. Jagose takes the opportunity to lavish her writing with archaic terms and nautical details which although interesting at times seem to be the main point of the story. But she also uses many fresh and original metaphorical phrases that give the book life and colour. The description of the voyage and the social interactions between passengers and sailors is compelling, as is Jagose’s rendering of the drama and danger of sailing in the early 19th C. Ultimately the history seems to weigh a little heavily on the fiction, something that is an important balance in historical fiction. But the book rewards with its attention to language, and for bringing to light, in an entertaining form, a little known episode of New Zealand history, and an enlightening account of sexual politics.