Africa Books


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Africa Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Africa
Nigeria: The Bradt Travel Guide (Bradt Guides)
Published in Paperback by Bradt Travel Guides (2005-08-01)
Author: Lizzie Williams
List price: $24.95
New price: $10.20
Used price: $7.80

Average review score:

Excellent informative book
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2005-12-18
I recently went on a medical mission trip to Nigeria. I bought this book to learn about the basics of the country, including culture, politics and religion. I found this to be a very well researched book with excellent information, presented in an easy to read fashion. Most notable, however, is the fact that this is the first book in its class. There are no other travel publications devoted to Nigeria. I highly recommend this book to anyone who is planning to travel to this part of the world.

Well Worth the Investment
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-12
Nigeria tends to get short-shrift in the travel guidebooks; rarely is it featured, and it is commonly maligned. This even-handed treatment of Africa's most populous country dishes out the treats that Nigeria has in store for the traveller as well as the negatives. In short, if one exercises common sense and stays alert to his surroundings, Nigeria can be a rewarding experience. The author is a fearless youngster eager to try everything, but also allows for an older person's expatriated sensibilities, understanding that not every traveller wants to camp or lodge in youth hostels (a common ailment in the Lonely Planet travel serials). She finds the warmth in the people that is a common Nigerian trait, and allows the reader to experience that warmth with her. There is no cold, clinical distance from her subject(s). This book is well worth the investment.

Invaluable
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-23
As a recipient of numerous email correspondences from immensely wealthy Nigerian heirs and heiresses, I figured that something must be going right in Nigeria, especially Lagos. So, having just sent an wealthy son of a King Obi Obi $10,000 (US), in exchange for some $450 million (US), I wanted to be the first to hop a plane to Nigeria to meet this fine fellow face to face. Particularly after the funds did not show up in my account as he had promised.

Let me tell you that this guidebook led me down the dusty, dirty, rebel-infested roads of Nigeria like I would imagine no other guidebook could. In no time I was lead straight to the Internet Cafe where I was shocked to find several sons and daughters of Kings and wealthy, deceased oilmen all writing to foreign potential investors.

My $10,000 (US) is long gone, and the millions upon millions never showed up, but my guide through Lagos was complete thanks to this book. If you plan on going, pick up yours today!

best guide to nigeria
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-25
As a frequent traveller to Nigeria i have been looking for a good guide for a few years - Lizzies wonderful book really helped me get to grips with this facinating but frustrating country. Especially loved the walking tour of Lagos. I'm not sure i have the courage to visit all the places she went to or travel the way she did but its interesting to hear of the places. This book is a must have for anyone considering visiting.

A "Must Buy" for anyone living in or visiting Nigeria
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-29
I have lived in Nigeria now for over seven years and I met Lizzie when she came to Lagos to write the book. Within the space of a few weeks, Lizzie has come to understand Nigeria and the Nigerian people in a way that many long term residents of my acquaintance have not. Time and time again when i was reading the book I found myself recognising places and situations exactly as I had experienced them myself. She writes with great empathy for her subject and tells it as it is, the good and the bad. I showed it to a couple of my Nigerian friends and they loved it and agreed with almost all Lizzie had to say. This book is quite simply a must for anyone living in or visiting Nigeria, as well as being a cracking good read.
Alan Parke

Africa
NURSES, NOMADS, AND WARLORDS (volume 1)
Published in Paperback by Luthers Publishing (2006-11-11)
Author: Mary Lightfine
List price: $19.95
New price: $16.59
Used price: $14.90

Average review score:

Fascinating, yet realistic. A must-read book!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-20
I was fascinated by this book. It was very engaging, informative, moving, and realistic. Mary Lightfine highlights the fact that knowledge of the culture and traditions of the target country is the foundation of any successful mission. It is also amazing that the reader can relate to the characters in the book. Despite their heroism, they are all ordinary human beings with feelings, doubts, frustrations, and emotions.

This is a book that anyone with any interest in humanitarian/international work should read. Well done Ms. Lightfine.

compelling, gritty, human, rewarding
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-19
A compelling book, at once as real as scraping concrete and expansive as a soft white cloud. Mary Lightfine tells her story of the violence in Africa with the eye of a reporter and the heart of a painter. Half a poet's journey, half a hard-as-nails documentary, this book is difficult to categorize except to say it is well worth reading and I heartily recommend it. You won't forget her vision or her voice.

A must read!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-16
Nurses, Nomads, and Warlords is an exciting adventure story combined with the insight and inspiration of a true story. A must read for anyone who is curious about other cultures, or anyone who simply enjoys a good tale of far off lands. I loved it!

A fascinating true story!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-08
Very exciting, touching every emotion, and very informative. An amazing look at our changing world through someone else's eyes.

A GRIPPING TALE
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-15
I have been looking forward to reading this book by Mary Lightfine ever since I learned that it was in progress. I received my copy this past week. Setting aside another book in which I was involved, NURSES, NOMADS AND WARLORDS caught my attention, my imagination and my respect from the very first. It is a very good read on a most basic level. On a more elevated level the stories of Mary's experiences are a study in the extremes of the good and the evil of which mankind is capable.

It is very doubtful to me that a reader with any shred of heart or compassion could fail to be deeply moved by the drama of Mary's dedication to helping in the war torn battlefields of Somalia. With her very life in daily danger, Mary persevered in doing what she could to make a situation that is about as close to hell on earth into something that is survivable. Very few of us give to others at the level described in this riveting work

Mary Lightfine is able to relate her stories as if she were telling of little more than a routine trip to the grocery store. She has successfully resisted the temptation to make her stories into any remote self aggrandizement. Her humility and love of humanity are evident on every page.

I have followed Mary Lightfine's work since Life Magazine featured her in an extensive article in 1999. Her work in Somalia is just the tip of the iceberg of the contributions to humanity this grand woman has given. I was so pleased to see that this is to be volume one. I will look forward to further volumes that will tell of her experiences in other areas of the world. In the meantime I plan to buy additional copies to distribute to family and friends. I feel good about doing so to spread the word about this remarkable woman.

Africa
Of Spirits & Madness: An American Psychiatrist in Africa
Published in Hardcover by McGraw-Hill Companies (2001-08-28)
Author: Paul R. Linde
List price: $24.95
New price: $4.90
Used price: $1.17
Collectible price: $32.00

Average review score:

Ancestor Bewichment Clashes with Modern Medicine.
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2001-10-29
Dr. Paul Linde's book "Of Spirits and Madness" is a wonderfully entertaining and insightful look into the culture and psyche of the Zimbabwean people. As an American psychiatrist in this third world African country, he becomes immersed in a cultural quagmire of ancestral spirits, evangelical Christianity and traditional healers all colliding with modern Western medical practices. The results, a train wreck of frequently amusing and sometimes very sad situations: experienes which challenged the author's intellectual and medical skills while raising questions in his own mind about the modern world's pursuit of indivudual gain and blatant consumption. This is a great book which will make all readers laugh, think and reevaluate one's own views of what is truly important. The best book I've read this year!

Must Read
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2002-01-31
I have worked in Zimbabwe for two years as a photographer and film maker. Of Spirits and Madness gives western thinking a new vantage point. Remember, there is no reality only perception. One of the best books I have read on Shona culture. The spiritual basis of life forms all other truths in Africa. Great Book, wonderful to read.

An excellent and inspiring book
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2001-10-18
In the spirit of the preeminent novelist/psychiatrist Irvin Yalom, Dr. Paul Linde has written a touching and inspiring book about his experiences as a psychiatrist working in Zimbabwe under very difficult circumstances. Despite the "depressing' subject matter (mental illness, poverty, political strife, AIDS, sexism. etc.), Linde has written a surprisingly uplifting account of the human condition. Using well-crafted prose, the reader learns many interesting things about the state of mental health in this Africa nation with its relatively advanced mental health system. Compared to other "third world" nations, Zimbabwe's treatment of the seriously mentally ill is good, but it is still a far cry from that of most Western nations. Linde is an excellent storyteller, telling the stories of his patients with poignancy, humor and deep compassion. All mental health professionals, both the experienced clinician and the neophyte should read this book. This book would also of interest to those interested in African current events. The reader will find himself deeply concerned for the plight of Dr. Linde's patients.

Taking on the Spiritual Challenge to Madness
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2001-10-16
There's never a dull moment in this psychiatrist's travelogue on a mad journey with his patients. During his year as a government psychiatrist in Zimbabwe, Dr. Paul Linde has to adjust to the cultural challenges that have his patients as likely to consult a witch doctor and herbal treatments as modern medicine.
Packaged in a series of literary narratives, the eleven character studies--one per chapter--personify the cultural and medical challenges he faces, from a young man convinced he's suffering to spare his community to the delinquent employee who claims she needs to rest her mind.
Linde approaches his new assignment with an open mind and writes with sensitivity. He invites the reader along in an exploration of the African supernatural and psychological landscape. This is stuff Karen Blixen didn't see in the Kenyan hills; it's more the twisted psyche Conrad explores at the heart of the Congo.
Of Spirits and Madness is a worthwhile read for anyone interested in the human condition.

Outstanding
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2001-10-29
I bought this book to be polite. When a friend of 10+ years writes a book... you buy it. And the day before his reading... you start the first chapter. What I did not expect was that I would absolutely inhale the text. My brain lit up with pleasure. There are so many good things about this book. Not only is the writing itself excellent, the information that Paul tucks into the narratives of each patient is downright fascinating. He takes up politics, economics, spirituality, culture, context, and mental health. The story of each patient's illness is refracted through Paul's Western training, his good heart, and his growing understanding of the local explanations for why things happen as they do. Along the way he provides a terrific set of curbside lectures about a wide spectrum of mental illnesses. He interweaves factual information about disease states with tender compassion for and curiosity about the people he served. I learned a lot from this book and plan to read it again. Maybe I should be polite more often....

Africa
Off to the Sweet Shores of Africa and Other Talking Drum Rhymes
Published in Hardcover by (2000-07-31)
Authors: Uzo Unobagha and Julia Cairns
List price: $16.95
New price: $24.64
Used price: $18.53

Average review score:

A cultural anthology of Africa for children of all races
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-12-27
This book is a cultural anthology of the African world for children as young as two years old. But the book really is set for older children and young adults. Besides the normal introduction to numbers and animal recognition, this is actually a work on music, poetry, and life interwoven with man, animals and their natural environment. Therefore, a good read for peoples of all races. The illustrations and colors beautifully project the imagery as it challenges the young mind to seek deeper meaning to what is presented. African adults reading this book will see it as a memory down their own childhood. I doubt though if it is different for other cultures. As a parent, a peek in this book was a trill, and I continue to enjoy reading it with my little girl. If you are looking for an illustrated book to teach your children the interdependencies of life, this will be one of it.

A cultural anthology of Africa for children of all races
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2000-12-28
This book is a cultural anthology of the African world for children as young as two years old. But the book really is set for older children and young adults. Besides the normal introduction to numbers and animal recognition, this is actually a work on music, poetry, and life interwoven with man, animals and their natural environment. Therefore, a good read for people of all races. The illustrations and colors beautifully project the imagery as it challenges the young mind to seek deeper meaning to what is presented. African adults reading this book will see it as a memory down their own childhood. I doubt though if it is different for other cultures. As a parent, a peek in this book was a trill, and I continue to enjoy reading it with my little girl. If you are looking for an illustrated book to teach your children the interdependencies of life, this will be it.

A cultural anthology of Africa for children of all races
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-12-26
This book is a cultural anthology of the African world for children as young as two years old. But the book really is set for older children and young adults. Besides the normal introduction to numbers and animal recognition, this is actually a work on music, poetry, and life interwoven with man, animals and their natural environment. Therefore, a good read for peoples of all races. The illustrations and colors beautifully project the imagery as it challenges the young mind to seek deeper meaning to what is presented. African adults reading this book will see it as a memory down their own childhood. I doubt though if it is different for other cultures. As a parent, a peek in this book was a trill, and I continue to enjoy reading it with my little girl. If you are looking for an illustrated book to teach your children the interdependencies of life, this will be one of it.

Treat for the eyes
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2000-08-22
This is one of the most beautifully illustrated books that I have ever seen! Every page is filled with bright colors and cheerful prose and images. It is a perfect book for the age group intended, but it is also a wonderful treat for an adult. The images are so delightful that I can look at them over and over again. I especially like the colorful borders found on many of the pages. This is the kind of book that you will want to keep forever - even when the children "outgrow" it. I highly recommend this book.

"When the lions come to play, little boys stay away."
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-04


This marvelous, colorful collection of children's rhymes celebrates "talking drums" of West Africa, of great significance in that culture, as "criers" beat messages from village to village, the rhythmic beats speaking to the villagers along the way. Influenced by a rich heritage and the clever humor of Mother Goose rhymes, the rhymes blend storytelling with a distinct cultural identity, creating a "simple rhythmic language" for young children and beginning readers, a learning process of language and rhythm:

"Off to the sweet shores of Africa,
Off, with my harp and harmonica,
I'll follow the walking, talking drum
To the land, where sunbirds hum."

The language of these rhymes is African: cowrie shells, akara balls, palm, papaya, coral and mango trees and African places from the Sahara to Zambezi. Reinforced by the theme of African mores and traditions, the rhymes inform and entertain, exploring the culture, rich ancestral history and pride in African descent:

"Race the striped zebra across the plains,
Race the striped zebra over the lanes,
Hip! For the zebra!
Hip! For me!
Hurray! For the happy and free!"

The stunning illustrations that complement the rhymes are arresting, images of the African countryside, the indigenous people, animals, fauna and flora, the scorching ball of yellow sun, straw-hatted huts, the colorful garments of children at play, velvet deep nights, myriad stars twinkling above the sleeping village:

"What is the pale moon made of?
What is the pale moon made of?
Of cowrie shells and ivory
Dipped in the shimmering, silvery sea
And tossed up like a rubber ball
To be gazed upon by all."

Family, tradition, the nurturing of children; the author has written beautiful phrases of place and childhood, accompanied by truly inspirational illustrations. Luan Gaines/ 2006.



Africa
Okavango Africa's Last Eden
Published in Hardcover by Chronicle Books (1993-10-01)
Author: Frans Lanting
List price: $45.00
New price: $108.47
Used price: $9.89
Collectible price: $82.88

Average review score:

The greatest pictorial work on Okavango!
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2001-02-02
Frans Lanting had created marvelous book. His pictures portray the unique beauty of the region, convey the wildness of a place, and force a viewer to visit the place immediately. The photographs and text also urge the people to save this unique ecosystem. We realize the impact of water on the unique environment of the delta that supports the greatest variety of the flora and fauna in the world. At the same time these photographs make us realize what will be lost if the water will be gone. This book has inspired me even more after I visited the Okavango delta. It made me to relive my own experiences once again. After more than 5 years of its publication, this book is still the best pictorial work on Okavango delta. Simply, the greatest!

One more time, simply the best
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 1999-01-20
As other Lanting books, attitude is all, from cover to cover

Stunning and original wildlife phtography
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 1998-10-14
This book makes me suspect that Frans Lanting is not only the worlds greatest wildlife photographer but also the greatest bird photographers, crocodile photographer, elephant photographer etc. As usual, his photography is far from the species type of photography often seen. Lanting connects with the subject and transform the experience into art. In addition, he is not afraid to break the rules and make it work. The book is a must in any nature photographers library.

Stunning photography and wonderful narrative
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 1999-10-17
This is a terrific book to learn more about this region. I can't recommend the book enough. The photography is stunning and the narrative is just right. I only wish it didn't end.

Frans Lanting sees Botswana with a keen eye.
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 1999-02-06
Mr. Lanting is a unique and wonderful photographer who is a great help to all of us. His photos capture the wildlife of the Okavango as they are -- not postcard photos. He has a respect and reverence of this fragile ecosystem (unlike none other in the world) and all that lives and dies there that is captured in this book. Botswana is a special country with a unique ecosystem in the Delta that you should travel to. I've had the good fortune to experience Africa eight times, Botswana twice. I will return many times to the Delta as there is so much there to experience and each time its fresh. Let Mr. Lantings photos pursuade you to go.

Africa
Orin Orisa: Songs for Selected Heads
Published in Paperback by Yoruba Theological Archministry (1997-11)
Author: John Mason
List price: $25.00
New price: $34.99
Used price: $50.00

Average review score:

If you want to sing afrocuban songs, you need it!!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-21
I think this is the best work about afrocuban roots and african music in Cuba.

Practical knowledge at your fingertips!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1998-12-05
This is a wonderful work, well researched, full of interesting comments and done with extreme care.

much-needed comprehensive compendium
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-02
finally a clear, cohesive compendium to the songs and chants of the Orisha tradition and well-researched vital information on the tradition of the sacred bata drums / for someone like myself, an Ocha initiate who lives in Asia, thousands of miles from Africa, Cuba and the US, this is a resource godsend --

ORIN ORISA - a MUST have
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 1999-06-07
To anyone that practices within the Ifa'Orisa community, this book is a jewel. It is not often that one stumbles upon a book rich with knowledge & standing strong in it's research & presentation. Mr. Mason has taken his years of practice & translated these beautiful songs to call the Orisa. I can only say that this is probably one of the BEST books I have ever seen on the Orisa tradition! Mr. Mason is to be thanked time & time again for his amazing contribution of this community! ASE!

Translations of Santeria songs & lots more - very impressive
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 1998-11-05
This is a huge, impressive book that provides a wealth of knowledge most of which you can't find in print in English anywhere else. It has background on Yoruba religion and Santeria, bata drumming in Cuba and America, and translations of many many songs. Also photos, etc. Some people will argue with some of the translations, but nobody can say this book doesn't add enormously to what's published in English on what has been an esoteric & oral tradition.

Africa
Our Secret, Siri Aang
Published in Paperback by Puffin (2007-07-19)
Author: Christina Kessler
List price: $6.99
New price: $2.99
Used price: $2.99

Average review score:

Excellent look at another culture
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-03
This beautifully written book follows a young Maasai girl as she reaches the age for her initiation into womanhood that includes the traditional circumcision and marriage. Times are changing for the Maasai and she would prefer to keep her freedom by delaying this ceremony and possibly even going to school. She has ulterior motives, as she has privately witnessed the birth of a baby rhino whom she names "Our Secret, Siri Aang", and claims the baby and mother as her other family. She secretly visits them daily but would lose track of them if the ceremony were to take place, since the recovery requires four months of isolation. Her father also struggles, trying to keep the traditional Maasai ways in his family, but seeing how changes are affecting it. He believes that school is a waste of time and is ashamed of his daughter for considering it and for questioning her responsibilities as a young woman. He has also witnessed his warrior son sell his soul by allowing passing tourists to photograph him for money. His inner turmoil leads him to actions that a Maasai, "the keepers and protectors of all wild animals", should never consider. The suspenseful journey allows the reader to consider the choices made and suffer along with the characters as their good intentions lead them farther and farther from their Maasai roots. This is an excellent book, well told and well characterized. My only complaint is the cover that, although I am confident is an authentic Maasai girl, is very unappealing to me. I did keep referring to it as I read the book because it matches the descriptions in the book perfectly of what a young Maasai girl would look like, but I rarely find that photographs make me want to pick up a book to read it.

Siri Aang a delight
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-25
Our Secret - Siri Aang is a well-written, thoughtful and evocative book for young people. The Maasai girl in this story is full of energy and courage, even though the traditions in her life are beginning to clash with her new awareness. The author, Cristina Kessler, writes with insight, love and a huge talent.
Africa and the Maasai culture come alive in this story, woven into adventure and intrigue.

No matter where Kessler might be, when she writes of her beloved Africa, she is there. And so are we.

- Jacqueline Buie
Santa Cruz, CA

Our Secret
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-01-28
Our Secret is a powerful story of a Masai girl facing a web of dilemnas. Christina Kessler has the ability to mix intrique, cultural values, and strong yet not sentimental characters. This book relates an important tale of a culture that is rapildy changing.
The details of daily life in a Masai village will appeal to readers as well as the indentification with an adolescent girl who must make difficult decisions.
Adolescent readers will not feel pandered to by reading this book that makes the reader a better person.

Sharing a Secret
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-12-18
This touching tale is a coming-of-age book about a twelve-year old Maasai girl, Namelok. It is set in today's Africa, where the Maasai face unwelcome changes imposed upon them by the outside world. Namelok is a mature and aware young woman who is unafraid to question the traditional ways. She is lured by the sights and sounds of the bush where she goes to gather firewood. One day she witnesses a black rhino giving birth. She whispers to the mother, "...let's call your beautiful baby Siri Aang, for that's what she shall be - Our Secret." Christina intertwines the theme of Namelok's protective stance toward the rhinos with the girl's maturing in a way that weaves a captivating story.

If I bend that far, I shall surely break
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-07-06
A book that bears more similarities to "Fiddler On the Roof" than (as I originally assumed) "Shabanu: Daughter of the Wind". After reading a certain number of children's books, a person runs the danger of becoming ever-so-slightly jaded. You start ticking of the cultures and countries covered. Have I read a tale of a nomadic child in the Cholistan Desert of modern day Pakistan? Check. How about a child in nineteenth century Southern Libya? Check. So when I saw this book about the contemporary trials of a girl living as a Maasai, I was already checking the title off in my head. I was not particularly heartened by the fact that this book had sat, untouched, in the New Books section of my library for a month or two. For all its good writing (which I will get to) this book sports a cover that kids do not readily gravitate towards. And this is a pity. Author Cristina Kessler is a far better author than most of the two-bit hacks out there, and as a Peace Corps volunteer, she knows from whence she writes. In "Our Secret, Siri Aang", we find that all human beings are complex characters with both good and bad inside of them. It just takes one girl to learn the hard way that her heroes may not be as perfect as they first appear.

A twelve-year-old girl in the Maasai culture will inevitably have a lot on her mind at all times. Namelok is no exception to this rule. Namelok carries with her the weight of a series of secrets, all exciting and all dangerous. First, she witnessed the birth of a baby black rhino in the bush, and has committed herself to the health and well-being of both the mama and the child. Second, her menstrual cycle has just begun, and she wants nothing to do with it. Menstruation can only mean an end to her childhood days and a fast circumcision (or "emuratare") before being married off to a man her father chooses. Third, she wants to learn from the village schoolteacher. This is expressly forbidden, not only because she is a girl but also because the Maasai do not believe such knowledge to have much use. All in all, the odds are stacked pretty squarely against Namelok. Then, one day, things get worse. Poachers are spotted in town. Her beloved older brother participates in a bit of foolishness that sets off a whole series of events. And when Namelok goes to visit her beloved rhinos, she sees vultures circling above. By the end, Namelok sets out on a quest to bring justice to the world and make her father see her as an equal and not just a young girl fighting to understand the world around her.

The book runs the slight danger of falling into the category of girl-refuses-an-arranged-marriage books (ala "Catherine Called Birdy" or the aforementioned "Shabanu") or the female-circumcision-in-children's-books camp (as with "No Laughter Here"). Fortunately, author Kessler avoids such trite topics. Namelok will have to deal with these problems later on down the line, but this tale is far more concerned with the ideas of change in a community and dying traditions. Our heroine's father fights the encroachment of unfamiliar ways and, in doing so, is led to a supremely foolish act. Readers of this book may not initially understand why it is so shameful for young Maasai warriors to pose for tourists' photographs for money, but the story eventually shows just how wrong the act can be. I loved that this was a book in which the heroine really does grow and mature before your eyes. I also loved that the ending left multiple strings hanging in the breeze. If "Our Secret, Siri Aang" were a more popular title, I would suspect that a sequel might be in the works somewhere. Alas, this is probably not the case.

Basically, this is a good title for those kids who want books with complex moralities. Where the world is not necessarily drawn into sections that are either black or white. At the same time, Kessler seems to have a firm grasp on Maasai culture and its people. You can put yourself completely into her hands as a writer without fear of any skimping on the details. All in all, the book takes an initially unrecognizable setting and puts the most human of faces onto it. A splendidly written piece of work.

Africa
Quilt Africa
Published in Paperback by Sally Milner Publishing Pty Ltd (2004-08)
Authors: Jenny Williamson and Patricia Parker
List price: $31.00
Used price: $131.79

Average review score:

Quilt Africa
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-17
Fantastic book Just what i needed to get ideas for the quilt i am making

Quilt Africa - Got To Have It!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-27
This is a phenominal book! If you are even curious about fabrics and/or quilting from Africa, this is a must have. Beautiful photos and the quilts are terrific - A real treat!

Quilt Africa
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-23
A very good book which gives lots of new idea's. Wonderful patterns to follow and help with colour decisions. I can realy recomend it.

Quilt Africa Purely Beautiful
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-28
The quilts that are show in the "Quilt Africa" Book that I purhcased are truly masterful. The colors are rich and exquisite and I will be using some of the animals for my sons quilt. He has chosen the animals and footprints he wants and saw how they can be used in his quilt. This book is truly amazing.

Beautiful quilts, but not for beginners
Helpful Votes: 24 out of 24 total.
Review Date: 2004-10-09
The book deserves 5 stars for the photographs of the stunning Africa-inspired quilts, but 3 for the lousy directions. The first half of the book is a photgraphic display of artistic quilts, sure to inspire anyone. Many different styles of quilting, lots of applique, all featuring gorgeous African fabrics and motifs. The second half has directions for 12 different quilts. The photographs are excellent and most of the projects include a photographic close-up of part of the quilt. Some of the projects would be suitable for beginners, but the directions assume that you either have another source of information on how to quilt, are incomplete, or are incorrect. A number of quilts require applique, and the brief directions in the book are not sufficient. Some of the directions are totally incorrect--so read carefully and think through the project. Use the photographs as inspiration for your own design. The applique templates are great, so between the templates and the photographs, there is plenty to inspire you.

Africa
Running with the Moon
Published in Hardcover by William Heinemann Ltd (1995-06-26)
Author: Jonny Bealby
List price:
Used price: $67.54

Average review score:

One of the best motorcycle travel stories i've read!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-25
I've read a lot of motorcycle travel stories, and done sone travelling myself in africa on a motorcycle. But this story is a great novel and a great journey. Better than e.g. Jupiters Travels.

Mathiessen on a Motorcycle
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-07-08
What a shockingly delightful and profoundly moving book! Not only is Bealby a highly accomplished adventure motorcyclist, he proves to be a most estimable writer -- call him Mathiessen on a motorcycle. I've read plenty of ham-handed motorcycle adventure accounts; this one is of the highest caliber, on par with Robert Fulton Jr.'s "One Man Caravan."

Bealby chronicles his heroic odyssey on a Yamaha Tenere through unforgiving regions of Africa with humility and gratitude. You'll find no chest-beating or tedious complaints here. The work is gorgeously written, richly textured, and acutely observant of both man and nature. Seductive, sensory, lyrical, and rhapsodic, this book immerses you in exotic -- even surreal -- territory with superb grace. Motorcyclist or not, you will revel in this awesome adventure.

Proving his literary virtuosity, Bealby expertly weaves the tragic tale of the death of his beloved Mel throughout his ultimately cathartic and redemptive account. A truly magical work. Buy it. Three cheers to Jonny Bealby!

A Classic Motorcycle Adventure Tale
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-03
There are many books in the motorcycle adventure travel genre, but few have been written by someone who is a good writer. Jonny Bealby does a great job of relating his journey across Africa from the northern deserts to the tropical jungles on a Yamaha Tenere with an appropriate mix of story telling, philosophy, and motorcycling. This book is the same league as "Obsessions Die Hard" by Ed Culberson in terms of adventure, entertainment and readability. Highly recommended for the armchair adventurer!

Not just for bikers!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-16
I have two main hobbies, off road motorcycling and reading, so when i bought RUNNING WITH THE MOON, i knew i was onto a winner and would enjoy it even before i had turned a page. From the tragic prologue to the epilogue after his incredible journey is over this book is a real rollercoaster of emotions (sorry about the cliche , but its true). You almost feel like you were there, and i wished i could have been to assist him when the bike got bogged down in thigh high water filled jungle tracks ,i know from experience what its like to be stuck in the middle of nowhere with a broken down bike. But then again there is a BIG difference between the middle of nowhere in the Yorkshire Dales, and the middle of nowhere in the Congo!(no gorillas in Yorkshire!). I also wanted to buy him a drink to cheer him up when he was stood up in Cairo, although that did eventually have a happy outcome. Initially i bought this book because of my interest in motorcycles, but non bikers dont be put off, i can heartily recommend it to anyone with a sense of adventure. Excellent!

Uncovering Africa through the eyes of a lonesome traveller
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2000-04-27
"Running with the Moon," an autobiography by JonnyBealby recounts the adventures of a man on a motorbike travellingthrough Africa in hopes of finding insights and answers to his lifeafter the sudden death of his fiance. What makes this book so notable is the fact that a journey of the sort undertaken by the author would be impossible in todays age due to the political state of the majority of African countries in the present. After the death of his fiance while travelling in Kashmir Jonny Bealby returns to an England which is not the same. Day to day life having changed into a struggle of lost hopes and loves. Challenged by this austere new world and compounded by his confusion he decides to undertake a journey across Africa apon a motorcycle. Accompanied by his best friend Neil, the two prepare for their journey and set off, a Yamaha Tenere under each...A fascinating insight into the beauty and sadness of a man who uncovers Africa for the reader and once again reclaims the peices of himself lost to him by past tragedies. Defianitely a must for the reader with a soft side for travel and adventure.

Africa
Sahara Overland, 2nd: A Route and Planning Guide (Trailblazer)
Published in Hardcover by Trailblazer Publications (2005-02-01)
Author: Chris Scott
List price: $29.95
New price: $14.99
Used price: $18.70

Average review score:

A Great Guide Book, But Not Always Entirely Accurate
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-14
I am an experienced desert driver and bought Sahara Overland in the planning stage of a Gilf Kebir and Uweinat trip that I put together with a bunch of friends when I was living in Egypt. On preparation, this is the bible. It is an absolute MUST get and DEFINITE need.What cars (although a bunch of good cars are not covered, and to his credit Chris Scott acknowledges this) and how to prepare them, advice on equipment and supplies, emergency repairs, all invaluable.

Advice on how to drive .... correct in places but dubious in others. Gilf trip GPS points were all out by a long way ... we thought as much before the trip when we plugged them into Ozzy Explorer and noticed that they kinda didn't fit with the sat images and the old Brit military maps. I cannot comment on other trips, but get alternative way points for the Gilf, the ones in the book are wrong.

Still, apart from these minor foibles, this book contains a wealth of sound advice, and is one of my favourite types of armchair travel books, not only does it stir my imagination (I dream of desert trips), but Chris writes with a dry laconic and sarcastic humour that put a smile on my face whenever I picked up this book.

Every traveler should read
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-11
I bought this book out of curiosity after reading an excerpt on the internet. I was totally absorbed in the book for some time after recieveing it. If you have any notion of traveling in the Sahara on your own or in a guided tour you need to read this book. The amount of information boggles ones mind, especially when it's delivered in a format that doesn't bore one to tears.

Super Saharah Guide!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-13
This guide is simply fantastic, it is amazingly accurate, and makes traveling across the Sahara so incredably easy! It is truly a fabulous guide, and comes highly reccommended!

A thoroughly excellent, traveler friendly guidebook.
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2000-08-03
Sahara Overland: A Route & Planning Guide is the first truly comprehensive guidebook to one of the world's most compelling and challenging environments, North Africa's Sahara Desert. Ranging from the Moroccan Atlas Mountains to the Red Sea, Sahara Overland is ideal for Saharan travelers whether for a weekend excursion, a week long vacation, or a season spanning safari. Thirty-five detailed itineraries are available, covering more than 15,000 miles through nine countries: Morocco, Mauritania, Libya, Mali, Tunisia, Algeria, Niger, Chad and Egypt. The only Saharan guidebook covering all aspects of traveling the great desert by vehicle, Sahara Overland provides tips on how not to get lost, and what to do when things go wrong. Chris Scott's informative, "traveler friendly" text is enhanced with fifty maps and more than 300 b&w and color photographs. If you are planning a trip through the Sahara, begin with acquiring and throughly reading Chris Scott's Sahara Overland.

The best guide to real adventure travel I've read
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-27
Chris Scott's book was worth the wait. I've been exploring the deserts of the United States and Mexico for decades, and my wife and I plan to ship our vehicle to Morocco and explore the Sahara soon. This book has left no question unanswered.

Chris's approach is always engaging, but exhaustive where necessary. He isn't afraid to be honest in equipment choices. For example, since he is from the U.K. I expected the vehicle selection chapter to be a Tom Sheppard-esque sermon about the perfection of the Land Rover. Instead, while pointing out the strengths of Land Rovers, he quite bluntly states that anyone needing the utmost in reliability should buy a Toyota Land Cruiser instead. The section on vehicle preparation is full of good, practical advice.

The route descriptions are excellent (and you can visit the author's web site for updates). However, I would recommend this book strongly to anyone considering traveling by vehicle in any desert in the world--there's that much information in it.


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