Travels in the White Man's Grave
Neil Wilson Publishing (Verlag)
978-1-897784-83-9 (ISBN)
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At the beginning of the 1950s, the interior of West and Central Africa was still known to most of the outside world as "The White Man's Grave", and there were still large parts where its forests were primeval. These forests inhabited the minds of most Westerners as places of foreboding. To Donald MacIntosh - a 23-year-old Gaelic-speaking Scottish forester - however, it was a dream come true when he found himself posted to the humidity of the fabled lands. During the next 30 years he was to wander through some of the most remote areas of West Africa, stretching along the shores of the Gulf of Guinea from Liberia to Gabon, where he operated as a surveyor, tree prospector and forest botanist. There he listened to the tales of ancient Africa from the lips of hunters, fishermen, chiefs and witch doctors from a vast variety of tribes in myriad encampments, drinking palm wine with them, attending their village dances and ceremonies under the tropic moon, or often simply lying on his own in the village clearing, listening to the tattoo of distant drums sounding through the columnar mahoganies.
MacIntosh had many adventures with the creatures of the forest, from leopards to homicidal buffalo, and from vipers to spitting cobras. Each tale is recounted in this volume in an odyssey which he describes as "fun and adventure all the way". Despite its reputation, MacIntosh was rarely ill in the "White Man's Grave" and he encountered a host of characters along the way - "Old Man Africa", "Magic Sperm", "Famous Sixpence" and "Pisspot" among them. His story is of an Africa which no longer exists, providing a glimpse into the region's vanished past.
Donald MacIntosh has lived a life far more interesting than most of us, travelling to far-flung places in his career as a forester, but it is as a storyteller that he makes his mark. Donald was born in 1927 on the Isle of Mull and moved to Galloway with his family in 1932, aged two. He is the eldest son of a Perthshire woodcutter and until the age of five, Donald only spoke Gaelic.
Foreword by Richard Ingrams ix 1 Traveller in an Antique Land 1 2 Whispers from the Past 11 3 The Age of Innocence 22 4 The Meek Shall Inherit 30 5 November Cherries 45 6 The Original Native 57 7 The Colonel's Lady 66 8 Old Man Africa 76 9 The Forest of Ghosts 87 10 Osei the Carpenter 93 11 Magic Sperm 106 12 My Old Friend Leopard 113 13 The Touracos of Putu 123 14 To Skin a Gorilla 132 15 Hibiscus Love 142 16 The Drunken Chimp 155 17 The Harlots of Mundoni 166 18 Jam Pass Die 179
Vorwort | Richard Ingrams |
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Verlagsort | Glasgow |
Sprache | englisch |
Maße | 138 x 216 mm |
Themenwelt | Literatur ► Biografien / Erfahrungsberichte |
Reisen ► Reiseberichte ► Afrika | |
ISBN-10 | 1-897784-83-X / 189778483X |
ISBN-13 | 978-1-897784-83-9 / 9781897784839 |
Zustand | Neuware |
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