'Spanning the decades from 1840 to 1870, this major new history from Charlotte Macdonald places the New Zealand Wars within the wider framework of imperial power.' – Kete Books
'[Macdonald] brings a lot of interesting histories together – colonisation, the New Zealand Wars, military history.' – Paul Diamond, RNZ Nine to Noon
'A compelling and significant contribution to understanding the reordering of power that shaped Aotearoa in the nineteenth century.' – Dr Miranda Melcher, New Books Network
'A career best for Victoria University Professor Emerita Charlotte Macdonald.' – Nevil Gibson, NBR
'Garrison World does exactly what a new entry into the historical canon should do – it challenges us. As readers, we are forced to confront the idea that the historical antagonist – the redcoat soldier – were not nameless, faceless, “enemies” – but complex figures of diverse experiences, outlooks and motives, deeply intertwined with our national history.' – Her Excellency The Right Honourable Dame Cindy Kiro, Governor-General of New Zealand
'[Macdonald uses] archival detail, including diaries from some of the soldiers who came here, as well as British colonial war documents from the National Archives in London.' – Kathryn Ryan, RNZ Nine to Noon
‘Garrison World brings together the histories of soldiers, wars and physical violence with the appropriation of land and attacks on Indigenous culture so vital to settlement and colonisation. A story of the exercise of power, vividly told in part through the lives of the “redcoats”, those foot soldiers who provided the binding threads of imperial power.’ – Catherine Hall, Emerita Professor of History, Chair of the Centre for the Study of the Legacies of British Slavery, University College London
‘Charlotte Macdonald deploys formidable scholarship, lucid writing and pertinent images to create a spell-binding exploration of the intersecting lives of soldiers and civilians during the New Zealand wars. The result is a magnificently well-informed, readable and enthralling book.’ – Atholl Anderson, Emeritus Professor, Australian National University; Adjunct Professor, Ngāi Tahu Research Centre, Te Whare Wānanga o Waitaha | University of Canterbury
‘A large number of imperial soldiers and sailors were stationed in New Zealand in the mid-nineteenth century, but beyond their involvement in fighting, their wider impact has remained little understood – until now. Garrison World brings this history to light through impeccable scholarship and dazzling insight. An essential work for anyone interested in understanding our past.’ – Vincent O’Malley, historian and author of The Great War for New Zealand: Waikato 1800–2000
‘Richly illustrated and elegantly written, Garrison World is a pleasure to read. It offers a social history of the British army that looks beyond battles, focusing on the everyday lives and worldviews of soldiers and sailors. By tracing their role in New Zealand, India and Jamaica, the book reveals the deep interconnectedness of conquest, settlement and imperial power.’ – Sekhar Bandyopadhyay, Emeritus Professor of History, Te Herenga Waka | Victoria University of Wellington
‘A compelling account of the soldiers and sailors who were the cutting edge of British colonialism. This richly peopled history immerses the reader in the lives of these military men and illuminates how they reshaped New Zealand, with enduring consequences. It offers a critical new vantage point on our colonial past.’ – Tony Ballantyne, Professor of History, Ōtākou Whakaihu Waka | University of Otago
Read 'Boots on the ground' in the Otago Daily Times
Read 'Hēnare Taratoa: A scholar in a garrison world' in E-Tangata