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The
Shadow of Kilimanjaro
On Foot Across East Africa
By Rick Ridgeway
Book Description:
The Shadow of Kilimanjaro - On Foot Across East Africa
- By Rick Ridgeway: "A master explorer… Ridgeway takes in
a broad sweep of country, writing about it with keen awareness
and undisguised affection. He paints colorful scenes…an entertaining
and literate memoir of back country adventure." - Kirkus Reviews
"The
Shadow of Kilimanjaro is a wonderful book about a long
walk?not a safari, which is a trip, but a mwendo, a true journey…I
envy him his constitution and his curiosity." -Paul Theroux
"Rick
Ridgeway…is a fine writer possessed of an eye for the telling
anecdote, a fully developed sense of absurd, and a need to
see what is beyond the horizon…(The Shadow of Kilimanjaro)
is a compulsively readable account of a long walk that seems
to move at the speed of light." - Tim Cahill
"As I
think back to some of my adventures, the ones that are most
memorable are those that held surprises, that brought experiences
that were not anticipated, or revealed lessons that, in advance,
were not considered. This walk was going to be such a journey…
It would be a trip such as the Indian anthropologist and adventurer
Fosco Maraini referred to when he spoke of the true kinds
of travel, the journey where the signposts are unfamiliar,
and where the new worlds you see reveal elements in yourself
that you never knew existed." - Rick Ridgeway
What would
it be like to spend one month in the close company of animals
that put you several links down on the food chain? Rick Ridgeway,
adventurer and mountaineer, decided to find out by walking
across East Africa from Mt. Kilimanjaro through untamed Tsavo
National Park in Kenya to the shores of the Indian Ocean.
The Shadow of Kilimanjaro - On Foot Across East Africa
- is a vivid account of the trek, a walk tour of 8,000 square
miles of wildness. Tsavo, the largest national park in East
Africa, contains a remarkable ecosystem. It is a haven for
elephants, lions, buffalo, crocodiles, and numerous other
small animal and plant life. Walking side by side these great
beasts-and mindful of the dangers they pose - Ridgeway and
his companions became attuned to the connections between man
and nature that few people will ever feel in this day and
age. Whether observing a sleeping lion or fleeing a charging
elephant, they experienced the thrill of living fully within
the natural world. Ridgeway's companions form a memorable
cast of a characters - Iain Allen, an accomplished guide with
a taste for luxury; Bongo and Danny Woodley, brothers and
wardens in the Kenyan Wildlife Service; and Mohamed and Lokiyor,
park rangers and natives of separate Kenyan tribes.
Ridgeway's
explorations also lead him to a variety of scientists, conservationists,
politicians, and tribesman, including David Western, the controversial
director of the KWS; Richard Leaky, anti-poaching activist,
former director of the KWS, and member of the renowned family
of anthropologists; and the Waliangulu, or "People of the
Long Bow," the greatest elephant hunters in East Africa. Following
in the wake of generations of explorers and colonists, Ridgeway
details a tortured history of appreciation for - and oppression
of - the peoples and wildlife of the region. He traces the
influence of such figures as Lt. Col. J.P. Patterson, an engineer
who killed two man-eating lions in Tsavo (basis for the film
the Ghost and the Darkness); Bill Woodley, the legendary warden
of Tsavo and father to Bongo and Danny; and Denys Finch Hatton,
the explorer and guide immortalized in Isak Dinesen's Out
of Africa. Ridgeway also discusses the heated battles among
conservationists for the future of East Africa's national
parks. A fascinating combination of adventure narrative, travelogue,
and political history, The Shadow of Kilimanjaro is a sparkling
evocation of the East African landscape, and an important
book about the relationship between man and the natural world.
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