The Men Who Would Be King is a series of encounters between 2014 and 2018 with the complex firmament of mythos and oral traditions that criss-cross Vanuatu, and the myriad foreigners who get lost in them. The book asks why this old explorers’ dream about deified white men has endured in the Western imagination, through our films and literature, and examines the long shadow it casts into our own time.
Jon Tonks is a British photographer based in Bath in the UK. His work focuses on long term projects telling stories about lives shaped by history and geography. His work has been featured in The New York Times, The Guardian Weekend, and Sunday Times Magazine. He has been shortlisted for the Taylor Wessing National Portrait Prize three times. In 2014 Tonks was presented with the Vic Odden Award by the Royal Photographic Society for his first book Empire: a journey across the South Atlantic to four remote British Overseas Territories.
Christopher Lord is a writer and editor. Previously based in the Middle East and Turkey for eight years, he has written about world affairs and contemporary art since 2008. The Men Who Would Be King is his first book.