Allen Lane, 208pp, £16.99
‘Let us tell, then, a story about magic, lies, sea battles, purloined princesses, slave revolts, manhunts, makebelieve kingdoms and fraudulent ambassadors, spies, jewel-thieves, poisoners, devil worship, and sexual obsession.’ So, beguilingly, begins David Graeber's last book, published two years after his sudden death at the age of 59.
A radical anthropologist whose books include Bullshit Jobs, about the meaningless tasks so many people perform to earn their corn, Graeber spent his life challenging preconceived ideas about the way we live, move and have our being.
Libertalia – an egalitarian utopia by the sea In the 1980's, as part of his doctoral research, he spent much time doing fieldwork in Madagascar, the north-east littoral of which in the early 18th-century provided a safe haven for pirates, who…