Africa Books
Related Subjects: South Africa
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Used price: $87.14

Wicked good bookReview Date: 2002-07-10
Well worth the Herskovits PrizeReview Date: 1997-04-09

Used price: $9.69
Collectible price: $50.00

Visually Stimulating, Spiritually UpliftingReview Date: 2005-11-28
A visual and intellectual feast of gigantic porportions.Review Date: 1998-11-04
Used price: $1.97

What a treasure!Review Date: 2003-11-24
The story is written in first person, told from the perspective of an African child, whose family lives on the savannah plains. Some caucasian tourists come for a visit, and the young girl forgets her teddy bear. Meto, the young boy, then has quite an adventure as he runs across the savannah, trying to catch up to the girl and return her animal to her.
This book is an absolute must to parents or teachers of young children (ages 4-8 in particular). We are honored to have shared the story together. We especially enjoyed learning the Swahili words for "Goodbye" and for various savannah animals.
MagicalReview Date: 2000-11-22

First Footsteps In East AfricaReview Date: 2000-01-15
first footsteps in east africaReview Date: 1999-12-18
Collectible price: $12.50

Here it is, the RIGHT one!Review Date: 2006-02-17
It's like being thereReview Date: 2004-03-05

matchlessReview Date: 2005-06-09
Vintage marketed this book (now out of print, it seems) as "international travel," which seems to me a pretty dubious classification when you read what I say below, although since the guy spends most of his time wandering around a foreign country I guess I understand their reasons.
But it's really a kooky adventure story . . .
The plot is as follows: Walker (an on-again, off-again ESL teacher in Saudi Arabia during the boom years of the 70s and 80s), has heard many times from his students about the custom of "sexual hospitality" as practiced in some regions of Saudi Arabia, such as in the Asir (just north of Yemen).
The idea of such a custom is that travelers (even "kuffar," non-believers) who are visiting into certain villages are put up in a house for three days and nights, no questions asked. Perks supposedly include bed, breakfast, and THE SERVICES OF A FEMALE.
Anthropologists (and many Arabists) swear the custom was not a myth -- up until about the 1960s, when television helped to unify the country's mores, bringing them more in line with those of Riyadh.
Naturally such a free-love custom is directly contrary to Wahhabi Islam, of course.
Anyhow, Walker, the narrator, has been hearing about this custom for years. His students from the Asir (privately) swear to him it's not a myth, and students from other areas of the Kingdom angrily deny that such a custom ever (or could currently) exist.
Well, on his last tour in KSA, Walker resolves to make an odyssey from Jedda down to the Asir, ostensibly to visit a former student but really to see if he can work himself into a situation where he is a recipient of this fabled "sexual hospitality."
In other words, he spends the book basically trying to get a free ride on a Saudi chick.
Well, I won't tell you how it ends, but that plot line is what Walker uses to hang his observations about the Kingdom, about Arabs, Muslims, Saudis, and the rapid modernization of their world -- and what it is like for a Westerner to live and travel there.
Most of the books about Saudi Arabia are either about how the Kingdom supports terror, about the coming revolution, about the oil wealth, etc.
Not this one.
It's witty, amusing, and incredibly well-written. What Walker was doing spending his time as an ESL teacher is beyond me.
It's neither overly-sympathetic to the Saudis, nor uselessly over-critical.
In fine, a balanced, insightful, and deftly-written book.
"It is amazing what the truth will do for one...Review Date: 2008-06-08
What a wonderful maxim Mr. Walker used, which aptly describes his entire book. As the only other reviewer, "Freston," of this gem of a book said: Most of the books about Saudi Arabia are either about how the Kingdom supports terror, about the coming revolution, about the oil wealth, etc."... in other words, so many books that theorize, and depict the "other" in negative terms, often by individuals who have never been to the Kingdom. Much that is written is also shear fantasy, masquerading as insight. But this book has the authentic ring from one who places his own culture's faults on an equal footing with those of others.
There is a tongue-in-cheek quest that ties together Mr. Walker's tale, his journey across the Kingdom from West to East in the early `80's: a search for the custom of Arabia which predates Islam, from what is considered the Jahaliya, "the time of darkness," when a widow was given to a male guest for three nights. Was there still a place so remote, so high and wild in the Asir, where this might still be possible? In this pursuit, as the guest of one of his ESL student's, to attend his wedding, he did things that probably only 10 other Western expats had ever done - such as ride in a crowded Toyota land cruiser, with the Sudanese and Egyptians, on a long journey from Jeddah high into the Asir.
With the exotic backdrop of his tour, and the cast of characters that he meets along the way, including old Saudi acquaintances, Walker makes numerous original philosophical observations on the respective cultures. He savagely and very wittedly skewers the foibles of Saudi society, which certainly would ban the book for sale in the Kingdom. But his strength is that he invariably compares their faults with the West's own, and sums up his agnostic position: "Don't get me wrong. I do not consider Islam any more a threat to mankind than Christianity or Judaism; in my view, no religion has the edge, in either absurdity or potential for mischief, over any other." (p 190) Another comparison is the relative merits of "repression," as espoused by Freud, and the sickness it brings on in society: "In Arabia the Repressed an unbalanced person is a sight so rare as to be shocking, whereas in permissive New York you are afraid to meet the eyes of half the people on the street for fear of encountering unrepressed madness." ( p 196)
In drawing his honest portrait, he aptly indicates the central reason why much of the West has a negative image of the country: "... just as it takes no Goebbels to appreciate the value of a propaganda so effective the before I ever laid eyes on an Arab, I despised them. It helps, when you take someone's land, to picture the owner as undeserving of it anyway." (p 135) (the American Indian would fully appreciate this sentiment)
As a weakness, I think of the authors of yore who visited Arabia, Walker placed too heavy a reliance on Charles M. Doughty, a crotchety traveler from whom Walker extracted the book's title. Walker repeatedly quotes him, yielding limited insights, burnished slightly only due to their age.
Towards the end of the book, his "quest" still unfulfilled, he is rather provocatively challenged by a woman who says: "You weren't looking in the right place." Likewise, if the slew of Saudi-bashing books has left you unfulfilled in your search for the real Kingdom, perhaps this is the right place to start. Surely a country that is spending three trillion dollars on the so-called war on terror can afford a few dollars to have this book re-issued, for the rich insights it renders of those who "live on the other side of the river," as well as ourselves.

Used price: $1.59

Excellent stories!Review Date: 2007-03-14
it's a smashing south african success.Review Date: 2000-12-12


Footprint Tunisia Handbook-Fantastic BookReview Date: 2002-11-18
Footprint TunisiaReview Date: 2000-06-20
Used price: $26.00

This is a great book intended to ecology specialistsReview Date: 1999-06-22
Houle, A. (1999). Book-Review: Foraging for survival: Yearling baboons in Africa. Behavioural Processes. (in press)
This book is destined to become a classic in primatology.Review Date: 1999-06-15
At the outset, Altmann describes what the baboons ate, how they ate it, and what foods they avoided altogether during the study period (1975-1976). He then identifies what baboons should eat. A foraging strategy is an ultimate endpoint, achieved via an array of potential tactical routes. Altmann evaluates both the feeding tactics and the eclectic foraging strategy of his young baboons by identifying the degree to which they deviate from an optimum model of adaptive feeding traits. The baboons' actual dietary intake is compared to the specifications of adequate and optimal diets; this is done for both an average yearling's diet, as well as on individual variance from the predicted diets.
Deviations from the optimum are viewed as indicators of potential differences in reproductive fitness. Although the feeding data stem from research undertaken in the mid-1970s, Altmann takes advantage of the two succeeding decades to relate differences in juvenile diets to longevity and fitness outcomes later in life. This historical depth is particularly valuable because it tests the model by evaluating whether those baboons that come closer to the optimum as juveniles have higher fitness as adults.
Altmann expands on the extreme selectivity exhibited by baboons, providing details on the toxic load, protein, carbohydrate, water content, and load of various plant species and the manner in which baboons maximize (or minimize) their intake of these food components. Finally, he assesses the anatomical and behavioral attributes that may contribute to making baboons one of the most successful and broadly distributed primate species. To complement the main body of the text, Altmann includes a series of appendices and tables in which he evaluates various methodological and definitional issues relating to calculating feeding bouts and dietary intake. Here, he presents additional detail on diet composition and the nutritional and toxic attributes of plant foods.
The work's emphasis on juvenile feeding behavior is an unusual yet valuable feature. This developmental stage is often overlooked in studies of non-human primate behavior and ecology, despite the fact that this period, and the transition from a milk diet to an adult diet, are undoubtedly critical to our understanding of adult fitness and life history patterns.
However, some caution is warranted: This book was not intended for the casual student of animal feeding behavior, nor for those new to optimal foraging theory. Altmann's models, food intake calculations, and feeding bout formulae are exacting, and quite abstracted from the experience of observing feeding behavior. Before embarking into this volume, non-modelers will have to review the technical terminology that necessarily accompanies Optimization Theory. In addition, I do not view the generalizations (outlined in Chapter Two) based on the relationships among body size, patch size, and dietary selectivity to be particularly illuminating. Too many exceptions to his proposed relationships can be found for such generalizations to be of much explanatory utility.
Nonetheless, this book is destined to become a classic in primate feeding behavior. It is exhaustive in its breadth, a pleasure to read, and sets the standard for amalgamation of modeling theory and ecological observation.

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Unfortunately TrueReview Date: 2002-03-26
I was so impressed with the cruelty exposed on the film that I would like to check it in a reliable source.
Suzanne Jurmain's book is very easy to read, once is oriented to the young people at the schools.
It is a good start to the knowledge of this episode and as I mentioned in the title the book, altough not deeply documented, is sufficient enough to assure you that the facts are unfortunately true.
A Gift of Truth for Your Children and GrandchildrenReview Date: 2000-12-19
Ms. Jurmain chronicles, for a juvenile audience, the story of the Amistad mutiny, so movingly recounted in the movie of the same name. In so doing, she draws upon the original court records and other contemporary documents. Although this is a book for young people, she does not shy away from describing the horrors of the middle passage, or the other institutions associated with slavery. Nor, does Ms. Jurmain give in to the temptation to solely demonize the Europeans associated with the slave trade: she accurately states that many of the slaves were captured and sold by other Africans. Thus, the African diaspora was all the more tragic.
Most importantly, Ms. Jurmain breaks the myth of docile African servitude. Her portrait of Cinque and the other captive's moral courage and willingness to take their futures into their own hands is in keeping with other recent literary and film releases such as "Glory," and "The Tuskeegee Airmen." By telling the truth, Ms. Jurmain helps all of us: no matter what the color of our skin, to see that courage is not limited to any gender or race.
Buy this book for your children and gradchildren. Help them to see the promise of freedom shining through one of America's darkest chapters -- and in the process help them to dream of a brighter tomorrow.
Related Subjects: South Africa
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