Island at the Edge of the World
The Forgotten History of Easter Island
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- Pre-Order
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- Expected Jan 27, 2026
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- $15.99
Publisher Description
“The true and fascinating story of Easter Island and its amazing statues” — Ken Follett
“Revelatory…fascinating… wholly convincing” — Daily Mail (UK)
“Striking . . . a stunning unraveling of many layers of hidden history.” — Publishers Weekly (starred review)
A vital and timely work of historical adventure and reclamation by British archeological scholar Mike Pitts—a book that rewrites the popular yet flawed history of Rapa Nui (Easter Island) and uses newly unearthed findings and documents to challenge the long-standing historical assumptions about the manmade ecological disaster that caused the island’s collapse.
Rapa Nui, known to Western cultures as Easter Island for centuries, has long been a source of mystery. While the massive stone statues that populate the island’s landscape have loomed in the popular Western imagination since Europeans first set foot there in 1722, in recent years, the island has gained infamy as a cautionary tale of eco-destruction. The island’s history as it’s been written tells of Polynesians who carelessly farmed, plundered their natural resources, and battled each other, dooming their delicate ecosystem and becoming a warning to us all about the frailty of our natural world.
But what if that history is wrong?
In The Island at the Edge of the World, archeological writer and scholar Mike Pitts offers a direct challenge to the orthodoxy of Rapa Nui, bringing to light new research and documents that tell a dramatic and surprising story about what really led to the island’s downfall. Relying on the latest archaeological findings, he paints a vastly different portrait of what life was like on the island before the first Europeans arrived, investigating why a Polynesian people who succeeded for centuries throughout the South Pacific supposedly failed to thrive in Rapa Nui. Pitts also unearths the vital story of one of the first anthropologists to study Rapa Nui, an Oxford-trained iconoclast named Katherine Routledge, who was instrumental in collecting firsthand accounts from the Polynesians living on Rapa Nui in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. But though Routledge’s impressive scholarship captured the oral traditions of what life had been like pre-1722, her work was widely dismissed because of her gender, her reliance on indigenous perspectives, and her conclusions which contradicted her historical peers.
A stunning work of revisionism, this book raises critical questions about who gets to write history and the stakes of ignoring that history’s true authors. Provocative and illuminating, The Island at the Edge of the World will change the way people think about Easter Island, its colonial legacy, and where the blame for its devastation truly lies.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Popular histories point to Rapa Nui, also known as Easter Island, as a cautionary tale of environmental collapse: the original inhabitants "let their population outgrow their home's capacity to support them" and the Europeans who first happened upon the island found "a devastated land." The problem with this story, according to this striking account from archaeologist Pitts (How to Build Stonehenge), is that it's not only "profoundly wrong" but belies a "shocking history of European cultural destruction... slavery and brutal exploitation." Consulting records of European contact, Pitts points to evidence that the island was densely populated in the 1700s, and that it was catastrophic slave raids in the 1860s that reduced the population to a mere 110 people. To tell the true history of Rapa Nui, Pitts combines the latest archeological evidence with the long-overlooked early-20th-century field notes of anthropologist Katherine Routledge, the first Westerner to consult Rapa Nui's elders and record their own account of their history. Her groundbreaking work forms a second mystery within the narrative, as Pitts investigates how "the lifework of this woman, who seemed to have understood the place like no other outsider," had vanished from both academic and popular history. The twists and turns of Routledge's story—a saga of strange rivalries and suppressed research—culminate in her being "kidnapped and incarcerated" in a "lunatic asylum, where, against her will... she was to spend the rest of her life." It's a stunning unraveling of many layers of hidden history.