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Long Live our blessed Statesman and elder
A Great Peice of Compact History
Insightful ramblings from the ascetic, Achebe

Amazing cheetah pictures, glimpse into a cool way of life
A nice non-preachy book on a wild animal as a pet
A wonderful book for animal lovers of any age.

READ ITCredo Mutwa is 'the real deal', and his outpouring of African history flows in the oral tradition to take the reader on a journey of discovery. The book contains incredible facts and insights, sure to alter old perceptions. This book has value for those interested in history, anthropology and archeology, shamanism, sociology, psychology, language, politics and mythology -If you feel any doubt about reading this book -Simply get it and read it.
one of the best books ive read
The Difinitive work

MesmerisingTo my surprise this book was even better than I expected; I couldn't put it down. Parfitt weaves the oral tradition of the Lemba people, historical scholarship parsed mostly from travel diaries, anthropological observation together into a travel monologue that both reveals a great deal about modern Africa while also tracing the Journey of the Lemba people. Eventually the journey he takes to find out about the Lemba becomes more interesting the the answers he may have found.
Top Notch Travel Adventure
Journey to Vanishing MemoriesWesterners tend to assume that our received wisdom scripture is infallible. But its written form must preserve the final state of an early oral tradition. By following the oral memory of the Lemba backwards in time and geography, Parfitt vivdly shows how their tribal memories merge and diverge under the influence of nearby cultures and events. All Lemba regard themselves as Jewish, and say the Hebrew "amen" at the conclusion of prayers, but many of them also recite Moslem formulas in Arabic. So, were they originally Islamic, with Jewish ideas introduced under the recent influence of Christian missionaries? Or the reverse? What do their memories have to tell us about our own traditions?
Along the way, he meets chieftans, beaurocrats, and ordinary Africans, all of whom he reveals as distinct personalities. He patiently tracks down clues found in every version of the Lemba histories. As his collection of evidence grows, the mystery enlarges. This is detective anthropology, written stylishly, and with urgency. The Lemba are forgetting their myths and the traditions are vanishing.
I highly recommend this book for revealing nuances of African culture and history in a matrix of travel, character, and discovery.


This is the only guide to have in East AfricaI also recommend getting the Trekking East Africa guide if you plan on doing any trekking. It goes more in depth then just the East Africa guide and if you find yourself on a mountain you will want a detailed map, which the East Africa guide lacks.
An absolute necessity for travellers to east AfricaThere are many ways to do it. You can go on an all organised expensive safari in Kenya or Tanzania. Even then I would think you would like to see some of the places outside the parks like Nairobi or Arusha.
The best way to do it is to travel by yourself. I have done it a couple of times now and find that all the organization by travel agents does not make up for the flexibility you have when you do it yourself. I have been in bad weather conditions necessitating an immediate change of plans. I have been so overwhelmed by the beauty of the Serengeti that I decided on the spot to stay longer. I have been so disgusted by some hotels I prebooked that I decided instantly to look for another one.
This book gives excellent and absolutely necessary guidance to do so. The getting around sections are good and up to date and, believe me, without it you will not find your way out of, e.g.Arusha on a bus to Nairobi. Local assistance is difficult to find.
Booking hotels in countries like Tanzania is not like we are used in the rest of the world. In most of the parks you have one or two lodges and if they are full you are outside; not a nice pprospect when you are right in the middle of the animals. The pricing information is fair and, again, you have to do some planning given the huge differences in prices between hotels.If you plan to stay in the Rhino lodge in the Ngorogoro Crater and the only open one is the Sopa, it will set you back at least an additional $100.
All the "facts for visitors" in particular the medical sections are good and should be read carefully. They can keep you from very annoying situations.
The safari sections are good and provide an abundance of companies you can organise your own tours with. They can be checked out in advance. The best way to do it however, if you have time, is to spend a few days in Nairobi or Arusha and compare the offers of the various companies and talk to the owners to see what they provide. You will be amazed how good and cheap these local operators are. A further advantage is that they go off the beaten track, so that you are not having a situation where eleven Volkswagen busses are in a circle around a sleeping lion.
For those reallly into it, try out camping in the Serengeti or Arusha. You will find yourself one with nature and, allthough there are no fences and you should keep a good fire going, relatively safe.
For those less adventurous and on a more tight schedule, the Guide still contains such a wealth of information and little sections on 'nice to knows' that it is well worth the investment.
If I would be allowed to advise I would prefer the Tanzanian side to the Kenyan side for going on safari. It is definitely more beautiful ond not half as busy.
Finally, I will never forget the images I took away from this part of the world. Cheeta's running through the grasslands in chase of prey. Lion mothers tending their cubs, the vast herds of wildebeest, the zebra's, giraffes peeping curiously through the leaves at your car and the wonderful sunsets sitting at a campfire and reflecting and the beauty of creation.
I hope you will enjoy your trip.
Don't leave home (for East Africa) without this book!

very useful travel guide
Carolyn
essential interesting reading for the independant traveller

AccessBack to the book, I have really not yet read the contents of the book to comment on it.
Thank
Reggae Report Review done 1993 vol 11
"KING OF KINGS AND LORD OF LORDS "

Finally, a context for African American spirituality!
All God's Children
A monumental work

Simply awesomeANY hunter or gun enthusiast, large or small, will love this book.
The 'Glory Days' of Africa
Rated 6 Stars

Best Westlake ever
Fantastic
Read long ago, but not forgotten
Achebe the honest and truthful dispenser of both sides of the story. Colonial griots (to borrow Achebe's words) such as Elspeth Huxley and other apologists have for too long been left alone to justify the dispossession of precious lands and cultures. Until the proud son of Africa made them eat their own words and exposed them for what they are. Dishonest griots deftly laying the groundwork for self-enrichment at the expense of peace loving and decent Human Beings.
Chinua Achebe as exemplified by his few but precious books writes not to make money but only when he must say something useful. Unlike modern day "authors" who are more about money than substance. I have no doubt Achebe can write profound and moving accounts of African and world issues at the rate of one book a day but he chose only to spend his time teaching.
It is obvious why the Nobel Prize went to Wole Soyinka instead of Chinua Achebe. Achebe refuses to write for a "foreign" audience and does not take his marching orders from anybody. He is his own man. Africans and honest people all over the world have in their own ways given Achebe the best prize in the world.
Continuous interest in his worthwhile classics such as Things Fall Apart,The Man of the People,No longer at Ease,Anthills of the Savannah, Morning Yet on Creation Day,Hopes and Impediments and many others.
Home and Exile may be a small book but has enough three pence (from Achebes "somebody knock me down and have three pence!") to liberate nations and individuals from the grip and stench of colonial and racist apologia masquerading as literature.
Long live Achebe, proud son of Africa and citizen of the world.
To know Achebe (by reading his books) is to know how to be an unassuming and proud Human Being who quitely and calmly states his truth for the benefit of us all.