Best of
Africa

1968

Bwana Game


George Adamson - 1968
    George Adamson and his seven lions live in a wild region of the Meru Game Reserve. It is a unique set-up, the lions are tame and extraordinarily affectionate towards him, wandering freely into his tent and often sleeping on his bed, yet nevertheless living the life of a truly wild pride, killing their own game, fighting off leonine intruders, and even mating in his presence." The Times"George Adamson is an unforgettable character. He has lived the sort of life that many dream about, but realise in their more sober moments that they would have neither the courage nor the endurance to do likewise." Scotsman

Shout at the Devil


Wilbur Smith - 1968
    In SHOUT AT THE DEVIL, the New York Times bestselling master storyteller takes us to a brutal paradise engulfed in the fires of civilization's war...A MAN ON HIS OWNThey couldn't be anymore different: an earnest young Englishman named Sebastian Oldsmith and an Irish American adventurer named Flynn O'Flynn who never encounters a rule he doesn't break. Fate brings them together in Zanzibar. A sadistic German turns them into allies, then into warriors.A WOMAN IN LOVEFrom the moment Rosa O'Flynn lays eyes on Sebastian, Rosa finds the man she would love forever—never mind what plans her father has for her. But imperialism is shaking Mozambique, where O'Flynn is the craftiest, fiercest beast in the jungle. And when Rosa and Sebastian lose what is most precious, they join a band of rogues, natives, wanderers, and hunters to start their own war against an enemy who has nothing to fear—and everything to lose...A HUNT FOR THE MOST DANGEROUS PREY OF ALLFrom the sound and sight of a charging bull elephant to ships ablaze on the Indian Ocean, this is a full throttle saga of survival—against nature, man, and the devil himself..."Action is Wilbur Smith's game, and he is a master."—The Washington Post Book World "[Wilbur Smith] puts the reader right there with details that are intimate, inspiring, horrifying…. Fans will be happy to know Smith hasn't lost his touch for the dramatic, exotic adventure story."— The Orlando Sentinel

Love Unto Crypt


Haddis Alemayehu - 1968
    B7 As parents, Fitaerari Meshasha and his wife Waizero Teru Aynet are determined to uphold the societal conventions of status and thus keep their daughter, Sablawengel, cloistered away from her 'less-socially prominent' peers. B7 Fitawerari Assagae, a middle-aged commander, offers to marry Sablawengel (past marriageable age) as a "divorced woman." B7 Despite extensive negotiations, Fitawerari Meshasha and Fitawerari Assagai duel over a perceived slight to the nobleman's honor. B7 Bazabah, a scholar and poet, is contracted to tutor Sablawengel in ecclesiastical Ethiopian literature. B7 An unsuspecting romance blooms between Bazabah and Sablawengel. B7 In lieu of the consequences of her parent's disapproval, Bazabah and Sablawengel plot an escape with the help of Gudu Kassa (a relative of Meshasha known for his contraire views and comic relief, a character akin to the fool in Shakespe

The Golden Trade of the Moors: West African Kingdoms in the Fourteenth Century


E.W. Bovill - 1968
    "Finely written and researched. ... This edition will no doubt whet the appetites of a fresh generation of scholars and students for greater knowledge of parts of Africa still surprisingly little-known to the outside world." -- Journal of Islamic Studies "A unique source book." - The New York Times "Utterly enthralling ... splendidly romantic." -- The New Yorker

Ulendo: Travels of a Naturalist In and Out of Africa


Archie Carr - 1968
    . . is really through Archie Carr's mind, where it is easy to move from Africa to Florida or Central America, or from mechanical dredges to prehistoric monsters. The result is always interesting because Mr. Carr has a rare ability to look at the world freshly."--Marston Bates, New York Times"The sights to which he calls our attention . . . the mile-high mushroom swarms of kungu flies of Lake Nyasa, the buzzards' ready manipulation of whirlwinds . . . are merely the chords from which, with the toughness of science and the insight of art, he improvises a brilliant opera of speculations about the evolution of animal adaptive behavior."--The New YorkerIn the timeless voice of a classic, Ulendo speaks to readers today with even more force and elegance than it did on its first publication in 1954. Written by Florida's preeminent nature writer, this memoir describes the African journey--the "ulendo," as they say in Malawi--of Archie Carr, who spent several summers in Africa on official business to study animal-borne diseases and sea turtle habitats.    His secret aim, he wrote, was "to see my dream of Africa unfold." Revealed here in images of pythons, fly spouts, and curious men, his dream became a passion to preserve the African wilderness. "I had thought of Africa as inexhaustible," he wrote in the preface. "Now, however, I am not able to get rid of the thought of its waning. It comes repeatedly into the Ulendo story, and has modified somewhat the tone of blithe irresponsibility I was aiming for."    Every few days during his trips he wrote letters to his wife and five children at home in Florida, and these personal asides, full of devotion to his family and enthusiasm for his adventure, are published for the first time in this new paperback edition. "Of course it was a lonely summer," Marjorie Carr writes in her prologue to the 1952 correspondence. "Archie's letters, written on little thin airmail stationery, were anxiously awaited and read and reread." With the reappearance of this collector's treasure, a new generation has the opportunity to experience the adventures and passions of this eloquent naturalist.Archie Carr, Jr. (1909-87), world-renowned sea turtle expert, was the University of Florida's first graduate research professor. Among his many books are The Windward Road (UPF, 1979), High Jungles and Low (UPF, 1992), So Excellent a Fishe, and several volumes for the Life Nature Library. In addition to countless awards for scientific work, Carr received the O. Henry Memorial Award, the John Burroughs Medal, and the first Hal Borland Award of the National Audubon Society for his writing.

The March to Tunis: The North African War 1940-1943


Alan Moorehead - 1968
    On the other, "the desert rats" of the British Eighth Army, and later the green American troops, come to face their first test in the crucible of combat. Over thousands of miles of desert sand, from Benghazi and Tobruk to El Alamein and Tunis, this is the full, blazing saga of the dramatic seesaw struggle that turned the tide of World War II.Includes all three volumes of the Desert War Trilogy:Mediterranean FrontA Year of BattleThe End in Africa

The Struggle Continues


Kwame Nkrumah - 1968
    The other five pamphlets were all written between 1966 and 1968 in Conakry, Guinea where this great Pan-Africanist carried on the socialist revolutionary struggle to which he devoted his whole life.Not only is Kwame Nkrumah's theoretical work highly original and consistent, it is also a practical guide to revolutionary action.

Egypt: Military Society; the Army Regime, the Left, and Social Change Under Nasser


Anouar Abdel-Malek - 1968