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Showing 1 - 7 of 7 matches in All Departments
A journey - both historical and contemporary - among the fantastical landscapes, beguiling creatures and isolated tribes of the world's fourth island: Madagascar. An improbable world beckons. We think we know Madagascar but it's too big, too eccentric, and too impenetrable to be truly understood. If it was stretched out across Europe, the islands would reach from London to Algiers, and yet its road network is barely bigger than tiny Jamaica's. There is no evidence of any human life until about 10,000 years ago, and, when eventually people settled, it was migrants from Borneo - 3,700 miles away - who came out on top. As well as visiting every corner of Madagascar, John Gimlette journeys deep into its past in order to better understand how Madagascar became what it is today. Along the way, he meets politicians, sorcerors, gem prospectors, militiamen, rioters, lepers and the descendants of seventeenth-century pirates.
Dolman Travel Book of the Year 2012 Between the Orinoco and the Amazon lies a fabulous forested land, barely explored. Much of Guiana seldom sees sunlight, and new species are often tumbling out of the dark trees. Shunned by the conquistadors, it was left to others to carve into colonies. Guyana, Suriname and Guyane Francaise are what remain of their contest, and the 400 years of struggle that followed. Now, award-winning author John Gimlette sets off along this coast, gathering up its astonishing story. His journey takes him deep into the jungle, from the hideouts of runaway slaves to penal colonies, outlandish forts, remote Amerindian villages, a 'Little Paris' and a space port. He meets rebels, outlaws and sorcerers; follows the trail of a vicious Georgian revolt, and ponders a love-affair that changed the face of slavery. Here too is Jonestown, where, in 1978, over 900 Americans, members of Reverend Jones's cult, committed suicide. The last traces are almost gone now, as the forest closes in. Beautiful, bizarre and occasionally brutal, this is one of the great forgotten corners of the Earth: the Wild Coast.
Guyana, Suriname, and French Guiana are among the least-known
places in South America: nine hundred miles of muddy coastline
giving way to a forest so dense that even today there are virtually
no roads through it; a string of rickety coastal towns situated
between the mouths of the Orinoco and Amazon Rivers, where living
is so difficult that as many Guianese live abroad as in their
homelands; an interior of watery, green anarchy where border
disputes are often based on ancient Elizabethan maps, where flora
and fauna are still being discovered, where thousands of rivers
remain mostly impassable. And under the lens of John
Gimlette--brilliantly offbeat, irreverent, and canny--these three
small countries are among the most wildly intriguing places on
earth.
A gripping account of an under-reported island' Spectator, Book of the Year '[A] brilliant new book about an island that has a geography from heaven and a history from hell' Daily Telegraph 'A brilliant work of travel, history and psychological insight . . . astute and sympathetic . . . very funny' Wall Street Journal Everyone has wanted a piece of paradise John Gimlette - winner of the Dolman Prize and the Shiva Naipaul Prize for Travel Writing - is the kind of traveller you'd want by your side. Whether hacking a centuries-old path through the jungle, interrogating the surviving members of the Tamil Tigers or observing the stranger social mores of Colombo's city life, he brings his own unique insight to the page: a treasure-chest of research and a gift for wry amusement. Through him, Sri Lanka - all at once dazzling, strange, conflicted and beautiful - comes to life as never before.
An extraordinary journey across the magnificent, delinquent coast
of Newfoundland and Labrador.
Haven to Nazis, smugglers' paradise, home to some of the earth's
oddest wildlife and most baroquely awful dictatorships, Paraguay is
a nation waiting for the right chronicler. In John Gimlette, at
last it has one. With an adventurer's sang-froid, a historian's
erudition, and a sense of irony so keen you could cut a finger on
it, Gimlette celebrates the beauty, horror and-yes-charm of South
America's obscure and remote "island surrounded by land."
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