The Journals of the First Fleet brings together two of the earliest written accounts of the voyage that led to the establishment of the British colony in New South Wales. Written by Arthur Phillip and Watkin Tench, these journals trace the fleet’s departure, the long passage to Botany Bay, the landing in 1788, and the uncertain first months at Port Jackson.Part travel narrative, part historical record, the book captures the practical realities, tensions and observations of a world in transition. It records the movement of ships and people across oceans, the creation of a settlement from almost nothing, and the first impressions of a land that would become central to Australian history. Alongside the logistics of the expedition are descriptions of daily life, the difficulties of the new colony, and early encounters with Aboriginal people.What gives the book its enduring force is its immediacy. These are not retrospective interpretations, but firsthand accounts written close to the events themselves. Read now, they offer modern readers a direct window into one of the defining episodes in the colonial history of Australia: ambitious, uneasy, consequential, and still deeply contested. Journals of the First Fleet is an essential volume for readers interested in Australia’s beginnings, the literature of exploration, and the original documentary record of settlement.