A rare, granular portrait of lives shaped by river, forest and custom. A vivid, exact anthropological record. Charles Hose's The Pagan Tribes of Borneo, Volume II, ranks among the more detailed ethnographic study of Borneo from the colonial era. Drawn from first-hand observations in early 20th century Borneo, its pages attend to dayak customs and beliefs, kinship and material practice, and the shifting patterns of ethnic relations in southeast asia. Hose writes with an observer's patience and a narrator's clarity: descriptive passages that favour detail over theory, precise notes that make complex social worlds intelligible. Readers curious about tribal cultures of asia find lively human portraiture; students of indigenous peoples anthropology and comparative ethnology studies gain direct access to primary material that supplements modern analysis. As a historical document this work sits squarely within colonial era ethnography, yet its value endures for those reconstructing southeast asian tribes history or tracing cross-cultural parallels. One of the notable works of Charles Hose, Volume II belongs both in public research libraries as an academic reference collection item and as a university anthropology resource, and it also rewards the curiosity of classic-literature collectors who appreciate early anthropological writing. Out of print for decades and now republished by Alpha Editions. Restored for today's and future generations. More than a reprint - a collector's item and a cultural treasure. Today the volume serves multiple readers: the general reader attracted to vivid ethnographic portraiture, historians tracing the arc of southeast asian tribes history, and instructors assembling a university anthropology resource for courses on colonial encounters and indigenous societies. It is useful in comparative ethnology studies as a period source whose particulars invite testing, revision and debate in light of later scholarship. Collectors of classic literature and those building an academic reference collection recognise in Hose a voice that is empirical, observant and, at moments, quietly evocative.