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  • Published: 2 June 2026
  • ISBN: 9781837314614
  • Imprint: Penguin Audio
  • Format: Audio Download
  • RRP: $28.00

The Traveller

The Revolutionary Life of George Forster and his Search for Humanity




An inspiring biography of the remarkable naturalist, explorer and revolutionary, by the bestselling author of The Invention of Nature

The Traveller spreads out before us the life and times of George Forster, who journeyed to the far reaches of the known world, and whose radical ideas about humanity, equality and freedom challenged the worldviews of eighteenth-century Europe.

Andrea Wulf paints a picture of a man of profound curiosity and brilliance. He joined Cook’s second voyage at the age of seventeen, an exploration of vast contrasts from the icy world of Antarctica to tropical islands of the South Pacific. Studying the diverse nature, peoples and cultures he encountered, he came back imbued with a deep belief in the equality of races – an understanding far ahead of his time. On his return he was feted in England, France, Germany and Poland, using his fame to advocate for freedom and women’s rights and against empire, racism and slavery. Wulf traces how Forster – inspired by the French Revolution – became a leader of the short-lived Republic of Mainz, before being declared an outlaw in Germany and forced into exile in Paris during the Reign of Terror.

Vivid, engaging and drawing on Forster’s rich correspondence almost entirely unpublished in English, The Traveller recounts an extraordinary, passionate life largely forgotten by history.

  • Published: 2 June 2026
  • ISBN: 9781837314614
  • Imprint: Penguin Audio
  • Format: Audio Download
  • RRP: $28.00

About the author

Andrea Wulf

Andrea Wulf was born in India and moved to Germany as a child. She trained as a design historian at the Royal College of Art and is the author of The Brother Gardeners (longlisted for the Samuel Johnson Prize 2008 and winner of the American Horticultural Society 2010 Book Award), The Founding Gardeners, Chasing Venus and the co-author (with Emma Gieben-Gamal) of This Other Eden: Seven Great Gardens and 300 Years of English History. She has written for The New York Times, the Guardian, the Wall Street Journal, the Los Angeles Times and many others. She lives in London.

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Praise for The Traveller

Andrea Wulf’s splendid biography rescues a dizzying life… [George Forster’s] was, frankly, an almost indecently interesting life story [that] provides the contented reader with uninterrupted fascination. How many lives encompass Maori tribes, Easter Island, Habsburg Austria and the French Revolution? Wulf, the author of acclaimed books on Alexander von Humboldt and the German Romantics, tells it all with the expected panache

James Marriott, The Times

Powerful ... exemplary ... Andrea Wulf draws on Forster’s publications and personal archives to reconstruct the trajectory of this remarkable, compellingly humane, figure

Sudhir Hazareesingh, Spectator

Fascinating ... a compelling life [that] presages our present-day attitudes to global difference, race and diversity. Wulf cleaves closely to archival verities, avoiding any tendency towards overembellished writing

Robert Mayhew, Times Literary Supplement

Award-winning historian Wulf draws on abundant archival sources to create a meticulously researched life of George Forster — Polish-born naturalist, ethnographer, explorer, and German revolutionary. Wulf amply restores his stature as a brilliant mind [in this] stirring, empathetic portrait

Kirkus Reviews

The singular and spectacular trajectory of George Forster [offers] an exemplary tour of the High Enlightenment .... In this lucent, affectionate retelling of his life, Andrea Wulf makes a convincing case for George as a thinker who has too long been dismissed or ignored ... There is a briskness to her prose and a simplicity to her structure ... She shares his sense of wonder at the beauty of emerald islands like Tahiti as well as his outrage at the violence perpetrated by the sailors who were taking part in what was clearly a colonial project ... An irresistible biography

Peter Moore, Literary Review

A revelatory account of the life of George Forster, whose rejection of racial hierarchies stood out amongst his peers ... At a time when racism pervaded public opinion as well as the philosophical texts of luminaries such as Jean-Jacques Rousseau and Immanuel Kant, Forster moved brazenly to critique and correct them. How he was able to transcend the conventional beliefs of his day is the central question of Andrea Wulf’s new book. The richness of Wulf’s research .... injects a novelistic specificity into the scenes she reconstructs. It also allows the author to move from closely narrating the events of Forster’s life, as if perched on his shoulder, to inhabiting his interior voice as he experiences the world in real time

Nick Bartlett, Guardian

Vibrant ... invigorating ... George Forster is one of the most fascinating figures you have probably never heard of. The Traveller thrillingly revives the forgotten life of this "liberal thinker far ahead of his time." Wulf writes movingly about Forster’s unconventional marriage and his unconventional politics ... a lively new book that hums with her characteristic verve

Jennifer Szalai, New York Times

Arresting ... pacy ... a compelling case for that lately much-maligned form, the single-life biography. In Forster, one sees the Enlightenment arguing with itself: its empiricism turned against its own racism, its universalism turned against its tendency to restrict the scope of its own ideals ... Wulf’s methods are largely archival, but enlivened by the willingness to retrace her subject’s journeys without her turning the book into the story of her travels rather than Forster’s. Wulf is confident enough that the facts of such a life speak for themselves to avoid any tedious traffic in revisionary argument. She wants to remind us that Forster matters ... that one life, examined with the right attention, can contain its own world.

Nikhil Krishnan, Spectator