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From the Publisher
The acclaimed adventure writer Ann Jones tells the story of her overland journey, with the British photographer Kevin Muggleton, from one end of Africa to the other. Their purpose: to reach the southernmost tip of the continent and find the Lovedu people, a legendary tribe guided by the "feminine" principles of compromise, tolerance, generosity, and peace. A tribe that was known for its use of skillful diplomacy instead of warfare, and was ruled by a wise and powerful magician, a great rainmaking queen -- the inspiration for H. Rider Haggard's novel She.

Together Jones and Muggleton set out from England in a 1980 powder-blue army surplus Series III Land Rover. They hurry through France and Spain to Gibraltar and board an intercontinental ferry to North Africa. In Morocco they work a scam to circumvent government red tape, and travel on toward the first great challenge of the journey: the Sahara, where they set out alone, through roadless shifting dunes, across the great apricot-colored expanse of desert.

Jones tells how they ferry across the river into Senegal and come upon the Ile de Saint-Louis, the first French settlement in West Africa. She describes how they beat their way through trackless bush to Bamako, the capital of Mali, on the Niger River, as their vehicle begins to disintegrate, and how they speed southward through once-prosperous Cote d'Ivoire and pause to visit the full-scale replica of Rome's Saint Peter's Basilica, built by the then-president of Cote d'Ivoire at a cost of 360 million of his own dollars. In Ghana they explore a fort from which slaves were shipped to the New World. They hurry through Togo and Benin to Nigeria, where they are harassed by omnipresent soldiers in the uneasy aftermath of the execution of the author Ken Saro-Wiwa and other political dissidents. In Cameroon they meet the fon of Chobe and his chief female minister, Ya Wende, and visit the twenty-four wives of the fon of Nkwem.

As they continue the journey they battle malaria, sing Christmas carols with American missionaries, and come near collapse on Zaire's impassable muddy "roads." Finally, they pause to recuperate in a posh hotel, whose luxuries spell the end of their expedition together -- the author rejecting modern comforts, her companion yearning for more.

Ann Jones writes of how she travels on in search of the Lovedu people: through Tanzania and Malawi and the Tete Corridor of Mozambique to the ruins of the once-magnificent city of Great Zimbabwe. She writes of crossing the Limpopo River into South Africa, where her long journey culminates in an audience with Modjadji V, Queen of the Lovedu.

Her book is an irresistible roller-coaster ride through Africa -- crowded with obstacles, beauty, maddening corruption, and marvelous people.

 

The Press

BOOKS OF THE TIMES; Trekking Widely Across an Africa of the Imagination
By RICHARD BERNSTEIN

..in the company of a rambunctiously profane British adventurer and free spirit, Kevin Muggleton, ...

in the commanding, tyrannical, impatient but indispensable company of Mr. Muggleton

BARNES AND NOBLE REVIEW

Muggleton's macho antics -- which range from suicidal recklessness behind the wheel of the Land Rover to flagrant defiance of machine gun-toting police at checkpoints --

BOOK PAGE

.. Kevin Muggleton, an iron-willed photographer and journalist from England who leads her across the continent at a breakneck pace. The rugged Muggleton turns their trek into an endurance test, insisting they cross the Sahara without the aid of maps and picking a particularly difficult route across Zaire. The pair drives until their jeep falls to pieces.

Setting out from Tangier in a battered old blue-and-yellow Land Rover, Jones and Muggleton face daunting physical challenges, from shifting sand in the Sahara to deep mud wallows in Zaire.