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Cruelest Journey: Six Hundred Miles To Timbuktu by Kira Salak
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Cruelest Journey: Six Hundred Miles To Timbuktu

by Kira Salak

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Kira Salak's account of her amazing kayaking trip down the Niger River, from Old Segou to Timbuktu. This route retraces the journies of Mungo Park, a famous Scottish explorer who disappeared during his second attempt to make it down the Niger to Timbuktu. Salak is incredibly independent, doing this journey alone except for sporadic meet-ups with her National Geographic photographer who is assigned the job of getting shots of her adventures. Some of the people she meets are wonderful, friendly and giving. Others simply see her as a rich white person, demanding money from her and actually chasing after her with their demands! This book is a good blend of travel narrative, historical information, and personal musings. Also, it is interesting to read about an area so little-visited by western travelers, especially in the style Salak sees it! ( )
1 vote akandy | Nov 27, 2008 |
Definitely one of the best travel books I've read this year. Salak, a PhD. in creative writing, deftly weaves together the history of African exploration, observations on the value of travel and descriptions of her own journey. Each of Mali's tribes emerge in vivid detail and complex issues like slavery and female genital mutilation are considered in a thoughtful way. Although Salak doesn't sugarcoat the many hardships of her 600 mile journey down the Niger River, her love of discovery shines through. I don't usually write in books but I couldn't help underlining many of her insightful, beautifully descriptive passages. I'll definitely be looking for more by this author in the future. ( )
2 vote cestovatela | Aug 11, 2007 |
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Wikipedia in English (6)

Djenné

Dogon people

Mungo Park (explorer)

Niger River

Shamanism

Timbuktu

Book description

Amazon.com Book Description (ISBN 0792274571, Hardcover)

Kira Salak is a young woman with a history of seeking impossible challenges. She grew up relishing the exploits of the great Scottish explorer Mungo Park and set herself the daunting goal of retracing his fatal journey down West Africa's Niger river for 600 miles to Timbuktu. In so doing she became the first person to travel alone from Mali's Old Segou to "the golden city of the Middle Ages," and, legend has it, the doorway to the end of the world. In the face of the hardships she knew were to come, it is amazing that she could have been so sanguine about her journey's beginning: "I have the peace and silence of the wide river, the sun on me, a breeze licking my toes, the current as negligible as a faint breath. Timbuktu seems distant and unimaginable." Enduring tropical storms, hippos, rapids, the unrelenting heat of the Sahara desert and the mercurial moods of this notorious river, she traveled solo through one of the most desolate regions in Africa where little had changed since Mungo Park was taken captive by Moors in 1797. Dependent on locals for food and shelter, each night she came ashore to stay in remote mud-hut villages on the banks of the Niger, meeting Dogan sorceresses and tribes who alternately revered and reviled her- so remarkable was the sight of an unaccompanied white woman paddling all the way to Timbuktu. Indeed, on one harrowing stretch she barely escaped harm from men who chased her in wooden canoes, but she finally arrived, weak with dysentery, but triumphant, at her destination. There, she fulfilled her ultimate goal by buying the freedom of two Bella slaves with gold. This unputdownable story is also a meditation on self-mastery by a young adventuress without equal, whose writing is as thrilling as her life.

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:24 -0400)

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