This book provides an exhaustive account of the various journeys around the globe that Joseph Banks or one of his team of plant collectors joined. Unfortunately, it is pretty light on botanical content.
As a gardener, I was expecting this book to increase my knowledge of botanical and gardening history - after all, the subtitle is "an adventurous history of botany". Unfortunately, I learned very little. This is because Goodman spends most of his time discussing the details of the journeys to get to the plant-hunting locations and barely any time at all on the actual plants.
So, for example, when describing a plant-collecting trip to China, we are informed that "At 8 a.m. on 9 February 1816 the three-ship flotilla consisting of HMS Alceste, HMS Lyra and the East India Company ship General Hewitt set sail from Spithead. The instructions to Captain Maxwell on HMS Alceste commanded him to sail through the Atlantic, stopping at Madeira, Rio de Janiero, the Cape, and then into the Indian Ocean through the straights of Sunda, and then..."
And so it goes on. And on. And on.
Yet when referring to the plants that were discovered during this trip, Jordan simply writes that they "managed to collect some entirely new plants", marking a footnote against this information. And when checking the footnote, I was told that to find out what plants they discovered on this trip, I needed to consult Goodman's original source! This happened multiple times - I waded through page after page of detailed descriptions of ships, crew, navigation routes...only to be told that the journey resulted in new plants being brought back to Britain, details of which were listed in original source material...
If you want to read a book about maritime history of the 17 and 1800s then you will probably really enjoy this. But if you want to read about the new plants and botanical knowledge gained by Britain during the same period, don't expect to find it here. I'm really puzzled as to why this got billed as a botanical history in the first place, when it's pretty obvious Goodman is viewing the botanical stuff as a tiresome interruption to the 'real story' of the voyages.