Carl A. Gibson-Hill was one of the last scholar-administrators in colonial Singapore and Malaya. Although he played a variety of roles in late British imperial society, he is best known for his work at the Raffles Museum and as editor of the Journal of the Malayan Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society after the Second World War. This biography, by Brendan Luyt, is an attempt to develop an understanding of a complex individual through an examination of his various publications, and personal letters, on a wide variety of subjects. Following this detailed analysis of the texts, Luyt concludes that Gibson-Hill was a perfectionist, which prevented him from completing an exceptional work—defined as a single-authored monograph—that would have left a more visible legacy of the ever-curious colonial figure, who was trapped in a liminal time of decolonisation and shifting standards in how scholarly output was judged.
Luyt divides the biography into seven chapters in addition to a brief Introduction and Conclusion. The first chapter is a standard biography of Gibson-Hill, describing an Englishman born in 1911 who was adept at natural history and photography as a schoolboy and then studied medicine at Cambridge University. Following his graduation and a marriage, which played little role in his subsequent life, Gibson-Hill moved to Southeast Asia, initially working as a medical officer on Christmas Island and then the Cocos-Keeling Islands, before moving to Singapore on the cusp of the Second World War. Following his internment during the Japanese Occupation, he returned to England before venturing back to Singapore in 1947 to take up a position at the Raffles Museum, where he made most of the contributions for which he is known in scholarly circles. On the eve of Singapore joining Malaya to form a new nation in 1963, Gibson-Hill committed suicide following an overdose of sleeping pills, a detail that Luyt omits from the initial biographical chapter, reserving it for the Conclusion.
The subsequent chapters of the book are a survey of Gibson-Hill's scholarly output, ranging from ornithology to history to boat building. The foundation of much of his work was a devotion to photography, along with a focus given to the academic journal he edited. Luyt considers all of this work in great detail, supplementing the discussion with personal letters between Gibson-Hill and various colleagues and friends. The picture that develops is of a personality who obsessed over almost any subject presented to him. Much of this is attributed to the loss of a manuscript on the Cocos-Keeling Islands that Gibson-Hill hid in the Raffles Museum prior to the arrival of the Japanese in 1942. The manuscript, and the notes for it that were stored elsewhere, were never recovered, which haunted Gibson-Hill for the remainder of his life.
Beyond his publications, Gibson-Hill perhaps is best known for both his caustic and supportive personality. He would practically rewrite entire manuscripts so the original author could get a piece published, while he would receive little recognition for the work. At the same time Gibson-Hill was also highly critical of the work of others as well as his own. This resulted in his work, and that of others, grinding to a halt. By the time of his death, the Journal of the Malayan Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society was so backlogged that issues missed their publication dates by years. My favourite fact in the book that reflects this era is that the 1961 issue of the journal only appeared in 1969, some six years after Gibson-Hill's death.
The result is a biography of a late-colonial scholar in Singapore and Malaya that primarily utilises his various publications. In each chapter Luyt reiterates Gibson-Hill's life story from childhood up to the early 1960s through the lens of a new topic and his scholarly output. While of interest, these discussions often focus on particular details, becoming a bit repetitive, and do little to elicit a deeper understanding of the individual. They do, however, provide a wide survey of his many works. The ultimate result is a fairly conventional bibliography, deeply wedded to scholarly production, that repeats many of the points raised throughout, which will be of vital interest to anyone fascinated in an important figure in the development of Malayan and Singaporean studies.