Staff Book Reviews
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Blood River: A Journey to Africa's Broken Heart
Tim Butcher
Since the
Portuguese arrived in the
Starting from the
This book is
immensely enjoyable. It tells us about the
Vintage 2007
ISBN 9780099494287
Pbk £7.99
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Umberto Eco - The Mysterious Flame of Queen Loana
Christian Rutherford writes:
Flicking through this
handsome novel, the first thing one notices is the abundance of small
colour illustrations, mostly of inter-war ephemera: adventure magazine
covers, comic strips, movie posters, advertising, propaganda. It
is through these artefacts that our hero, Yambo, attempts to rediscover
his own identity following a memory-erasing accident. Through
this gradual unveiling of the world of his childhood and adolescence,
he reveals an unexpected self, further questions, contradictions and
elusive truths. This book is at once philosophical, playful and
gripping, as well as being a powerful evocation of northern
Vintage 2006
ISBN 0099481375
Pbk £7.99
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Apsley Cherry-Garrard - The Worst Journey in the World
Victoria Boscawen writes:
Having little interest in polar exploration or the literature surrounding it, it came as a surprise to find myself reading The Worst Journey in the World. Having started, however, I found myself unable to put it down. Cherry-Garrard's telling of this journey fraught with danger and adversity is a masterclass in understatement, taking the reader with each page closer to the end of the world but amazingly never to the end of Man's endurance. One comes away at once uplifted, inspired and humbled by the remarkable courage and great goodness of which these men were capable.
Pimlico 2003 (orig. 1922)
ISBN 1844131033
Pbk £9.99
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Robert Guest - The Shackled Continent: Africa's Past, Present and Future
Nick Creagh-Osborne writes:
A penetrating
analysis of Africa's problems delivered in big categorical statements: "To
understand why Africa is so poor, we must first ask why
Pan 2005
ISBN 0330419722
Pbk £7.99
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Philip Roth - American Pastoral
Christian Rutherford writes:
American
Pastoral is a story ultimately about the decay of old-fashioned American
idealism as the hero, 'Swede' Levov, is thwarted in his striving to pursue the
perfect life for which he seemed destined by his beloved daughter Merry who,
having become radicalized by militant opponents of the war in
Vintage 1998
ISBN 0099771810
Pbk £7.99
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Siri Hustvedt - What I loved
Natasha Shafi writes:
From the outset, Siri Husvedt in her novel "What I Loved" instantly creates an air of mystery making us aware this will be a story far deeper than what is said on the surface.
We are transported to the
As the story unfolds, so does the brooding dark quality behind the story, which increases the deeper we get, illustrating the simplicities of life that are often taken for granted. This is best described through the young character of Mark. The subtle details of his character that Husvedt incorporates throughout the novel eventually become the novel's premise overtaking the dramatic and tragic events that had occurred previously.
There are moments in the novel where Husvedt interjects vivid details of a New Yorker feeling displaced in various states in America and also characterises the strong sense of place in which the novel in set.
This becomes a novel that superseded my expectation. Yes it is a novel that describes the New York art scene, the concept of art history, the lives of artists, their partners, living and working closely to such people as well as dissecting the mundane, the tragic, the complex concept of love; but it essentially makes you think outside of the subject matter, it grips you and presents twists and turns that you would not expect. The eloquence and potency of the Husvedt's written word is only justified by reading the novel itself. This most certainly is a book one will learn from and be enchanted by.
Sceptre 2003
ISBN 0340682388
Pbk £7.99
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Alexander Maitland - Wilfred Thesiger
Nick Creagh-Osborne writes:
Alexander Maitland, who knew Thesiger well for many years, has a written a biography which although being illuminating and penetrating never feels as if it might be intruding on the privacy of a very self contained man who was chronically wary and mistrustful of people all his life. This warm and remarkable book is full of analysis and psychological insight and is fascinating on the motivations behind Thesiger's journies, what he hoped to find among tribal peoples and why he "cherished the past, felt out of step with the present, and dreaded the future".
A great biography which succeeds in submitting its subject to a rigorous examination but which handles the process with great sympathy, delicacy and respect, and which is never prying or intrusive.
HarperCollins 2006
ISBN 0002556081
Hbk £25.00
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Robert Whitaker - The Mapmaker's Wife
Nick Creagh-Osborne writes:
In the 1720's, during the peace which followed the end of the Spanish War of Succession, scientific debate raged in
As
Years later, as the expedition draws to a close, its youngest member, Jean Godin, who has married Isabel Grameson, the daughter of a local family, journeys on ahead over the mountains and down the Amazon to find a route to bring his wife back to France. Then, disaster strikes; the borders between French and Spanish territories are closed and Jean is stranded for twenty years in
Eventually Isabel follows him down the Amazon. Her epic journey becomes a horrifying nightmare as she left the only survivor of the expedition, alone and starving to confront the terrors of the jungle.
The book is a fitting memorial to an exceptional woman whose tale of courage and endurance is one of the greatest journeys in all Travel.
Bantam 2005
ISBN 0553815393
Pbk £7.99
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Jules Stewart - Spying for the Raj
Nick Creagh-Osborne writes:
Returning to his theme of
Travelling disguised as pilgrims or traders the Pundits were men of exceptional resourcefulness and courage who mapped vast Trans-Himalayan regions, in constant danger and at the greatest risk of their own safety, with phenomenal accuracy.
Jules Stewart's exhaustive research has reclaimed the Pundits' heroism and devotion to the now out-moded concept of duty from the historical obscurity to which they might otherwise have remained consigned. He tells their story with the fastidious eye for detail of a historian combined with the novelist's keen appreciation of a tale of derring-do, excitement and high adventure.
Sutton Publishing 2006
ISBN 0750942002
Hbk £17.99
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John Reader - Africa: A Biography of the Continent
Nick Creagh-Osborne writes:
A staggering achievement: to condense into 700 pages the story of Africa from a ball of gas before the Big Bang, over thousands of millions of years, through geological time, into archaeological time, right up to the Rwandan genocide in the 1990s, and Nelson Mandela. Detailed and scholarly certainly, but also magnificent and accessible. Reader asks why the early human population which migrated out of Africa grew so much faster than that which remained, and sets out to "illuminate the history of human interaction with Africa" - as if Africa itself was a character, and hence in the title the book is referred to as a biography and not as a history, which puts one in mind Conrad's description in "Heart of Darkness" of the interior of the continent containing a "stillness of life [which] did not in the least resemble a peace; it was the stillness of an implacable force brooding over an inscrutable intention".
Penguin 1998
ISBN 014026675
Pbk £15.99
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Jason Elliot - Mirrors of the Unseen
Nick Creagh-Osborne writes:
One does not have to read very far
into Jason Elliot's new book, subtitled "Journeys in
As well as the main trajectory of
the author's narrative, his asides and digressions are equally memorable: short
essays on the tiles of
The book is timely of course, as the
West squares up to the perceived threat of
Picador 2006
ISBN 9780330486576
Pbk £8.99
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Sara Wheeler - Too Close to the Sun
Nick Creagh-Osborne writes:
The life and times of Denis Finch Hatton, the man best known to posterity as Karen Blixen's lover in Out of Africa and as the original of the Robert Redford character in the film of the same name. Finch Hatton, a man said to have all but invented the concept of charm, went out to British East Africa, latterly Kenya, in pursuit of the space and freedom in which to live and breathe and to escape from the prevailing atmosphere at home of expectation and suppression. Late in his short life he eventually found his niche as a white hunter and guide to touring V.I.P's, most notably the future Edward VIII, and he was one of the very first to appreciate the need for the conservation and protection of game in Africa.
The book is especially good on the
historical context and background of Finch Hatton's life: the gradual eclipse
of aristocratic influence in England, the forgotten chapter of the First World
War fought with dreadful suffering in East Africa, and the evolving British
experience of Africa from rediscovered Eden, through the excesses of Happy
Valley, to the loss of confidence in Britain's colonial mission and waning
assumptions of white supremacy. The book, like Finch Hatton's life, ends
suddenly with the fatal crash of his light aircraft in which he perished in the
rolling hills of
Vintage 2006
ISBN 9780099450276
pbk £8.99
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Ahmadou Kourouma - Allah is Not Obliged
Nick Creagh-Osborne writes:
In an unedifying tale of murder, violence,
torture, extortion, cannibalism, anarchy and appalling cruelty young Birahima
spends three years searching for his aunt in Liberia, a land which warring
factions have reduced to a state of barbarism.
After the death of his mother Birahima becomes one of thousands of
child-soldiers, adolescent warriors high on drugs and armed with Kalashnikovs,
who kill and destroy at the behest of one warlord or another. The child-soldiers live in camps surrounded
by human skulls on stakes; they murder and rampage without mercy, compunction
or moral qualms, although when one of their own number is killed they are
reduced to paroxysms of grief and floods of tears. The fate of Birahima and his friends Siponni
the Viper and Johnny Thunderbolt certainly does not make for an enjoyable read
but this apocalyptic tale of
Heinemann 2006
ISBN 9780099433927
Pbk £7.99
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William Dalrymple - The Last Mughal
Nick Creagh-Osborne writes:
Drawing on
the newly rediscovered "Mutiny Papers", a vast store of virtually unused
documents in Persian and Urdu in the National Archive of India, William
Dalrymple presents a completely new view of the Indian Mutiny. Dalrymple's researches have shown that from
the Indian perspective the Uprising was from the first a war of religion: a
response to missionary activity, the rise of Christian Evangelism, and the
ambition of many on the British side to impose Christianity on
Both the British retreat from Delhi and their return were marked by violence and viciousness on both sides but this was as nothing compared to the mass murder and wholesale destruction unleashed by the British once they had retaken Delhi. Many seemed to be engaged in a war of extermination as members of the Mughal court were hunted down and the still- "beating heart of Indo-Islamic civilisation was ripped out".
A sad, shaming story of Imperial conceit and catastrophic retribution which Dalrymple concludes by tracing a direct link from the consequent hardening of Moslem attitudes towards the Raj which occurred at the Deobandi madrassa from where, 140 years later, the radicalism of the Taliban and al-Qaeda would also spring.
Bloomsbury Publishing 2006
ISBN 9780747587262
Pbk £8.99
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Peter Carey - 30 Days in Sydney
Nick Creagh-Osborne writes:
This is "a
wildly distorted account", claims Peter Carey, of his return from
Bloomsbury 2001
ISBN 0747555001
Hbk £9.99
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David Downing - Zoo Station
Nick Creagh-Osborne writes:
Zoo
Station is not only a tense and subtly understated novel of espionage,
inhabiting the same shadow world as Alan Furst and early John le Carre, it is also
powerfully set in time and place:
Old Street Publishing 2007
ISBN 1905847084
Pbk £10.99
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Wilfred Thesiger - Arabian Sands
Nick Creagh-Osborne writes:
Classic
Travel Literature at its very best, Arabian Sands is Wilfred Thesiger's
account of his two great crossings of the Empty Quarter in
Thesiger longed for a world far from the tyranny of man's machines where all pretense was stripped away and life could be lead free of all but the essential material possessions. He found this life with the Bedu and his book is written on the cusp of a time when Western man's desire for oil would completely change and destroy the world of "Arabian Sands".
Penguin 1991
ISBN 0140095144
Pbk £10.99
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Laurens van der Post - Venture to the Interior
Nick Creagh-Osborne writes:
Summoned to
Vintage 2002
ISBN 0099428733
Pbk £7.99
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Eric Newby - A Short Walk in the Hindu Kush
Nick Creagh-Osborne writes:
What better
way to commence a wild, romantic and improbable journey to the mountains of
Picador 1981
ISBN 0330266233
Pbk £8.99
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Neshani Andreas - The Purple Violet of Oshaantu
Nick Creagh-Osborne writes:
There is
very little Namibian fiction available in translation in this country but the
"The Purple Violet" is a gem. It is a
slowly evolving story of village life in the vast, scrubby, flat lands of
northern
Heinemann 2001
ISBN 0435912089
Pbk £9.99
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Norman Lewis - Voices of the Old Sea
Simon Hardy writes:
The book charts
the three consecutive summers Norman Lewis spent in the late 1940s in a little
Spanish fishing village in what is now the
What we get is a meticulously observed description of village life, its customs, its key characters and the first inklings of tourism that would change the village and that entire area of coast line forever.
Executed with humanity, humour and the author's extraordinary descriptive powers Lewis brings the village to life with beautifully simple yet telling portraits. We are introduced to the priest for example, San Ignacio, who "was well thought of on the whole, largely because he had lived with a mistress quite openly, and had learned to mind his own business".
It was a life in which the average age of a fisherman was 45 and in which marriage could only be contemplated if the sardine and tunny fish haul was good and the fisherman could pay off his debts.
But Lewis
is not misty eyed about his adopted village and never passes up a chance to
expose the absurdities and foibles of communal life. He charts the gradual and
subtle ways in which the community is exposed to change and the arrival of
outsiders who see the economic potential of the village and the gradual trickle
of upmarket visitors venturing south from
It is Lewis's descriptive powers that stay with the reader - none more so that his painting of the fishermen and the sea they live by. The author once described himself as the only person he knew who could walk into a room full of people, and leave it some time afterwards without anyone realising he'd been there. As a writer he used that very quality to quietly observe the village and beautifully capture a life and a community that would otherwise be lost forever.
Picador 1996 (orig. 1984)
ISBN 0330345613
Pbk £7.99

