In a groundbreaking study, Watkins explores the post-transportation experiences and lives of people sent to Van Diemen’s Land. As a legacy of penal transportation, those labelled as ‘wasted’ and ‘unattractive’ were subject to emerging forms of institutional care. By using life-course analysis, this book successfully reveals the lives of women and men who entered and died within the walls of pauper establishments within an institutional context that severely tested their resilience. I don’t know any other book which combines this approach to examine this topic, and I greatly appreciated the depth and quality of the empirical research, as will students and researchers of this area.