Awesome writing, with detailed description of a strange "exotic' island. It had the casual racism of the 20th century though.
It is sort of (emphasis on sort of) like William Golding's "Lord of the Flies" (1954) but with adults not kids. People from different social classes and races meet on a ship for a journey from Asia to Australia. There is a lot of conversation about human nature and purpose...and a lot of the "N" word thrown around but it was set in 1938, so...*shrugs*
I almost DNF having already known the ending and not being in the mood for it, but the novel is fascinating, and I enjoyed the fauna/flora description, and some of the conversation. There is an unresolved mystery at the end, I wanted to know if the ship was sabotaged, or it was an accident. On the island, one of the survivors, for reasons we were never told, instigated a conflict that shattered their idyllic first few days (or weeks).
The savagery/barbarism of 'uncivilized' tribes was a cliche, and I am glad that the ending wasn't as I remembered. You can call this novel a battle for survival as humans stripped away from all that we know, and against brutal natural elements which are as beautiful as they can be deadly.