
One Dry Season
In the Footsteps of Mary Kingsley
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Narrado por:
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Lisette Lecat
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With richly evocative images and wonderfully entertaining anecdotes, Caroline Alexander transports you to the dense interior of equatorial Gabon. In One Dry Season, she chronicles her adventures as she makes her way alone through dangerously primitive territory.
When she first read of Victorian explorer Mary Kingsley’s travels in the French colony of Gabon, Alexander knew she had to experience the present-day nation for herself. Soon she is retracing Kingsley’s route - struggling through tangled vines in humid rain forests, chugging up the churning Ogooué River in a packed steamer, and fending off gigantic cockroaches. The country she discovers is a challenging mixture of Africa’s exotic past and its practical present.
A splendid storyteller, Caroline Alexander introduces you to the colorful new friends she made along the trail, including a shy mission nun, a half-mad French woman, and a village chief who treated her as an errant teenaged daughter. Lisette Lecat’s expert narration brings out all the excitement of today’s Africa.
©1989 Caroline Alexander (P)1998 Recorded BooksHow much can one say about Gabon?
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This travelogue is well-written and fascinating. The author points out the many differences and similarities in the geography as well as the culture of Gabon compared to the 1800s and early 1900s. She tells stories within her own story about Mary Kingsley, Trader Horn, Dr. Nassar, and other prominent figures of bygone days.
I found much that spoke of personalities and relationships and personal growth in the way Alexander presented the histories and her own experiences and impressions following in the footsteps of Kingsley. There were many instances where I paused to think about character development (I mean human, not literary character development), including my own character.
If you enjoy Lecat as a narrator, you will enjoy this book. If you like to read about traveling in the jungle and in unusual cultures, you will like this book. (I know many people not so inclined and they would not enjoy this book.)
My only problem with the book was that sometimes I became confused between when the author was speaking and when she was relating someone else’s story (like Mary Kingsley’s or Trader Horn’s). Had I listened more attentively, that would not have been a problem. But I tend to listen to audiobooks while I am doing other things. This was not, however, a serious problem.
I recommend this book for lovers of travelogues, history, and Lisette Lecat’s narration.
Captivating journey, if you like this kind of thing!
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