Agnes Keith: Author of Land Below the Wind
Who was Agnes Keith and what did she write?
Agnes Keith was an American author who lived in Sandakan from 1934 to 1952. She wrote Land Below the Wind (1939) and the wartime memoir Three Came Home (1946), the most internationally read portraits of colonial-era Sabah. Her Sandakan home is now a museum.
Agnes Keith at a glance
Not every figure central to Sabah's story was born there. Agnes Newton Keith, an American writer who lived from 1901 to 1982, made Sandakan her home for nearly two decades and, through her books, gave the wider world its most vivid picture of pre-war North Borneo.
Born in Oakland, California, she arrived in Sandakan in 1934 and stayed, with one dramatic wartime interruption, until 1952. The phrase she chose for her first book title, Land Below the Wind, has since become an enduring nickname for Sabah itself.
American author (1901 to 1982); lived in Sandakan 1934 to 1952; wrote Land Below the Wind, Three Came Home and White Man Returns; her house is now a Sandakan museum.
Her years in Sandakan
Agnes Keith came to North Borneo after marrying Harry Keith, who held the post of Conservator of Forests in the British administration. Settling in Sandakan, then a busy colonial town, she found herself immersed in a world far from her Californian upbringing.
It was this everyday experience of life in Sandakan, its people, landscapes and rhythms, that she turned into writing. Living there from 1934, she became one of the few outsiders to record the texture of pre-war North Bornean life with affection and detail.
Land Below the Wind
Keith's first book, Land Below the Wind (1939), described her life in North Borneo with warmth and humour. It struck a chord with readers and critics alike, winning the prestigious Atlantic Monthly Non-Fiction Prize.
The book's success carried beyond literature. Its title became a popular and lasting nickname for Sabah, the land below the typhoon belt, and it remains the work for which Keith is best remembered. For modern readers, it offers a rare first-hand window into the colonial-era state.
Three Came Home and the war years
The Second World War transformed Keith's experience of Borneo. Her second book, Three Came Home (1946), is an account of her internment, with her young family, by Japanese forces in wartime camps. It is a sober, powerful contrast to the lighter tone of her first book.
The memoir reached a global audience when it was adapted into a Hollywood film in 1950, starring Claudette Colbert as Keith. A third book, White Man Returns (1951), described the family's return to a changed, post-war Sabah, completing her trilogy of North Borneo.
The Agnes Keith House museum
Keith's connection to Sandakan is preserved to this day. Her former home, the Agnes Keith House, has been fully restored and now operates as a heritage museum, giving visitors a sense of the colonial-era domestic life she wrote about.
The house is an integral part of the Sandakan Heritage Trail, a walking route through the town's historic landmarks. For travellers interested in Sabah's past, it pairs naturally with reading Land Below the Wind, letting the place and the prose illuminate each other.
Keith's books bring colonial Sabah to life. Read more in the History of Sabah guide, or browse other Notable Sabahans.