In August 1855, 16-year-old Chaloner Alabaster left England for                     Hong Kong, to take up a position as a student interpreter in the China Consular                     Service. He would stay for almost 40 years, climbing the rungs of the service                     and eventually becoming consul-general of Canton. When he retired he returned to                     England and received a knighthood. He died in 1898. Throughout his adult life,                     Alabaster kept diaries. In the first four volumes of these diaries, collected                     here by Benjamin Penny, the teenage Alabaster recorded his thoughts and                     observations, told himself anecdotes, and exploded in outbursts of anger and                     frustration. He was young and enthusiastic, and the everyday sights, sounds and                     smells of Hong Kong were novel to him. He describes how the Chinese people                     around him ironed clothes, dried flour and threshed rice
  how they gambled,                     prepared their food and made bean curd
  and what opera, new year festivities and                     the birthday of the Heavenly Empress were like. Like many a young Victorian, he                     was also a keen observer of natural history, fascinated by fireflies and ants,                     corals and sea slugs, and the volcanic origins of the landscape.                     Alabaster's diaries are a unique, vibrant and riveting record of life in                     the young British colony on the cusp of the Second Opium War. With A Young                     Englishman in Victorian Hong Kong, Penny sheds new light on the history of the                     region.