A WWII novel in which Biggles & crew are sent to establish a base on Borneo from which to harass the Japanese forces.

Unsurprisingly, this book has a big racism issue. The local people on Borneo are stereotypical but at least they have agency and significant, sympathetic roles. Ditto for some Chinese characters. My biggest problem was more the very high level of generalized background racism.

I read this one largely because I was promised Biggles flying a plane while he has malaria, and that does happen, but between the amazing bit with Biggles flying a plane with a concussion in Biggles Sweeps the Desert and the utterly horrifying description of malaria in Little House on the Prairie, I was expecting something spectacular. Biggles flying with malaria is good but it's not in the league of either of those.

However, Biggles in Borneo does feature some actually spectacular sequences, including 1) a deadly snake in the cockpit, 2) Biggles piloting a barge like it's an airplane, 3) a rampaging mad elephant. Also, Ginger has a really great bit toward the end. Those parts were great, but overall the book was not a favorite.

In conclusion, Biggles fandom needs more malaria that's more dramatic. I recommend reading Little House on the Prairie (the single most racist Little House book, are the mosquitos also transmitting racism?) for inspiration. Also more of Biggles attempting to fly vehicles that do not fly. More dangerous animals loose on planes would also be good. And much as Dashiell Hammett suggested having a man with a gun enter if your plot is getting tedious, this book proves that another thing that really brings the excitement is a rampaging mad elephant.

sholio: blue and yellow airplane flying (Biggles-Biplane)

From: [personal profile] sholio


I really loved the malaria scenes, to be honest, but I can see if you went in expecting something more dramatic, it would be disappointing. (And the concussion scene *was* great. I've reread that one a million times.) The "flying a barge" scene, and Algy making fun of him for it, is one of my favorite scenes with them in any of the books. Biggles definitely needs to fly more things that do not actually fly.

(The racism in this one *is* a lot, though.)
sholio: blue and yellow airplane flying (Biggles-Biplane)

From: [personal profile] sholio


I do want more malaria in fic though! Biggles gets malaria, attempts to fly a bus.

Or a couch.

I now want feverish and hallucinating Biggles assuming everything in his immediate vicinity is an airplane and acting accordingly, to the despair and hilarity of his caretakers.
sholio: blue and yellow airplane flying (Biggles-Biplane)

From: [personal profile] sholio


Biggles tackling anyone who attempts to leave the room without a parachute!

OMG, that's so adorable and hilarious.
sholio: sun on winter trees (Biggles-plane)

From: [personal profile] sholio


Biggles, apparently limp and floppy and barely capable of movement at all, suddenly SPRINGING from the couch in a panic and leaping ten feet to tackle a stunned Algy who is just trying to leave the room to get him a cup of tea. Suddenly Algy is flat on the floor with a sweaty, wild-eyed, and feverish Biggles on top of him babbling incoherently about parachutes.
wateroverstone: Biggles and Algy watching the approach of an unknown aircraft from Norfolk sand dunes (Default)

From: [personal profile] wateroverstone


I'm always struck by the level of caring in the malaria bout. Algy spots that Biggles is suffering well in advance of it becoming bad and makes all the arrangements necessary to be with Biggles, just in case, without once mentioning that he's worried he might be ill. How closely must he be watching him? That is managing him to the nth degree.

I find In Borneo quite similar to Delivers the Goods and prefer the second title.
black_bentley: (Default)

From: [personal profile] black_bentley


One of my favourite bits (wholly unsurprisingly) is Algy and Ginger's full-on old married couple argument after the snake in the cockpit and the ballsed-up emergency landing. And Ginger saying, "You're not blaming me for this, I hope?" in a hurt voice <333
black_bentley: (Default)

From: [personal profile] black_bentley


The whole conversation is just so very Married™️. Algy's crabby about having buggered up his landing and Ginger (understandably) thinks he should be getting a bit more sympathy after being stuck with a poisonous snake.

And then the snake escapes - presumably so it doesn't have to listen to them bitching anymore!
philomytha: airplane flying over romantic castle (Looks Back cover)

From: [personal profile] philomytha


Needs More Malaria! Biggles Goes Home has more malaria, it's Ginger rather than Biggles this time who's ill, but it's a somewhat larger part of the plot. I do like the little hints leading up to Biggles falling ill here that Algy and Ginger can see the early warning signs but can't make him stop and rest, the little mutiny when they insist on going with him in case something happens to him is great.

And I remember imprinting on those scenes from Little House as well. We should definitely have a weak feverish Biggles struggling to get water.
sholio: two men in the water, one being carried (Biggles-h/c)

From: [personal profile] sholio


I do like the little hints leading up to Biggles falling ill here that Algy and Ginger can see the early warning signs but can't make him stop and rest, the little mutiny when they insist on going with him in case something happens to him is great.

Yessss, I love how in tune with him they are.
sovay: (Morell: quizzical)

From: [personal profile] sovay


And much as Dashiell Hammett suggested having a man with a gun enter if your plot is getting tedious, this book proves that another thing that really brings the excitement is a rampaging mad elephant.

I just like this line.
sholio: Man with gun in black and white (Noir gangster guy)

From: [personal profile] sholio


"Of all the gin joints in all the world, that rampaging elephant had to crash into mine."
marycatelli: (Default)

From: [personal profile] marycatelli


The great secret of writing a high-adventure tale is figuring out what your "man with a gun in his hand" is. I wrote a story once where it was "set something on fire."
el_staplador: (Default)

From: [personal profile] el_staplador


While I would not recommend John Buchan to anyone looking for a racism-free reading experience, Richard Hannay has a bout of malaria in Greenmantle and discovers that Not All Germans Are Bad Actually (one ends up looking after him). Although there is then the denouement (very iddy, and also yikes).
sevenall: (Default)

From: [personal profile] sevenall


Thank you for these excellent reviews! As someone with a great deal of Biggles books within easy reach, they are immensely helpful.

I also really appreciate the assessment of the racism in the books; it helps me choose what to read when.
sevenall: (pilots)

From: [personal profile] sevenall


Oh, I would be happy to join the discussions - I own maybe seventy of the books and about half of them in Swedish early editions. The translations are both really funny and, I've understood, rather creative. I've been a little hesitant to shed my lurker status, but this tiny fandom seems to be so much fun and the fic is amazing.
mildred_of_midgard: (Default)

From: [personal profile] mildred_of_midgard


are the mosquitos also transmitting racism?

Headcanon accepted.
.

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