Travel Books

Google

General

Travel

World

Asia
Africa
North America
South America
Antarctica
Australia
Europe
Caribbean

Countries

Argentina
Bahamas
Belize
Brazil
Canada
Chile
China
Costa Rica
England
France
Germany
Greece
India
Ireland
Italy
Japan
Kenya
Mexico
New Zealand
Norway
Panama
Portugal
Russia
Scotland
Singapore
Spain
Switzerland
Thailand
US

States

Alaska
Florida
Hawaii
Maine
Massachusetts
Michigan
New Hampshire
New Mexico
New York
Oregon
Tennessee
Utah
Vermont
Virginia
Washington State
Wyoming
New England

Cities

Chicago
Dallas
Las Vegas
Los Angeles
Miami
Moscow
New York City
Paris
Rome
Seattle
Vancouver
Washington DC

Videos

Travel VHS
Travel DVD

Travel With RJ


Search Now:

AFRICA BOOKS

Posted in Africa (Wednesday, October 8, 2008)

The Hotel Book: Great Escapes Africa Written by Shelley-Maree Cassidy. By Taschen. The regular list price is $39.99. Sells new for $23.28. There are some available for $3.99.
Read more...

Purchase Information
2 comments about The Hotel Book: Great Escapes Africa.
  1. I really like this book. Kind of heavy and big. Not serious reading of course. Stunning photographs of places most of us can't afford or wouldn't want to. Lots of ideas for those who want to try to make their home look completely different than the norm. Author has selected diverse properties showing you that Africa has just as romantic getaways places as in Europe and the Far East.


  2. These tantalizing pictures of beautiful African terrain paralize me with delight. Once I opened this treasure chest of African glory, I could not stop. Cover to cover, backwards and forwards, this is by far the best hotel book I've ever had the priveledge of having my hands touch. This has a prime place on my coffee table, and heart. I'm going to Africa, baby!!!! And I KNOW where i'm staying!


Read more...


Posted in Africa (Wednesday, October 8, 2008)

Kilimanjaro: The Great White Mountain of Africa Written by David Pluth and Mohamed Amin and Graham Mercer. By Camerapix. The regular list price is $60.00. Sells new for $37.80.
Read more...

Purchase Information
2 comments about Kilimanjaro: The Great White Mountain of Africa.
  1. What a gorgeous book! The photos and descriptions do a little justice to the real thing, making it much easier to try to explain to others the mulititude of ecosystems along the trail to the summit (brrrr!). Highly recommended!


  2. My mom and brother both climbed Mt. Killimanjaro in Sept. 2001. And as a birthday gift to my mom I got her this book. I to have enjoyed looking at the pictuers and also I was in Africa as well but I only have seen the mountain through my mom's and brother's photos.
    If you ever have a chance go and climb the moutain it will make you a different person.


Read more...


Posted in Africa (Wednesday, October 8, 2008)

Namibia Space Written by Julienne du Toit. By Struik Publishers. The regular list price is $22.95. Sells new for $15.56. There are some available for $14.78.
Read more...

Purchase Information
No comments about Namibia Space.






Posted in Africa (Wednesday, October 8, 2008)

Marrakesh Encounter (Best Of) Written by Alison Bing. By Lonely Planet. The regular list price is $11.99. Sells new for $6.00. There are some available for $5.00.
Read more...

Purchase Information
1 comments about Marrakesh Encounter (Best Of).
  1. Marrakesh Encounter was exactly the guide book I needed for my first trip to this fascinating city. This Lonely Planet 'book' has 176 pages and is pocket sized. It is organized, well illustrated, and has a excellent city map. The author, Alison Bing, has included everything from a quick reference page to geographic sections describing the various neighborhoods, each with their own map. This comprehensive guide made me feel at home before I even got there. I was able to book my lodgings, plan my itinerary, and have an appreciation for the cultural differences I would be experiencing. The perfect guide book!Marrakesh Encounter (Best Of)


Read more...


Posted in Africa (Wednesday, October 8, 2008)

Botswana - Culture Smart!: a quick guide to customs and etiquette (Culture Smart!) Written by Michael Main. By Kuperard. The regular list price is $9.95. Sells new for $5.27. There are some available for $5.65.
Read more...

Purchase Information
2 comments about Botswana - Culture Smart!: a quick guide to customs and etiquette (Culture Smart!).
  1. We have recently returned from Botswana and had the very good fortune of spending three days in the Kalahari with Michael Main. He is extremely knowledgeable, entertaining and most importantly very well informed - just as he is in his book about the culture in Botswana.

    For those travelers who are going to Botswana and are interested in more than just seeing the "Big Five" this book is for you. After all, the people are just as much, if not more, a part of the travel experience and Michael Main knows the people of Botswana.


  2. Mike Main provides a complete snapshot of the people and cultures of Botswana. It is not the usual tourist guidebook of only places to visit. This small book packs a large amount of essential information for a traveler who wishes to understand the people, their history and avoid embarrassing moments. I would highly recommend this book as an essential read before a visit to Botswana. Its small size means that you can also take it with you!


Read more...


Posted in Africa (Wednesday, October 8, 2008)

No Mercy: A Journey Into the Heart of the Congo Written by Redmond O'Hanlon. By Vintage. The regular list price is $15.95. Sells new for $8.70. There are some available for $1.22.
Read more...

Purchase Information
5 comments about No Mercy: A Journey Into the Heart of the Congo.
  1. Besides the dangers of sickness and loss of life so well reviewed by others, we come to the true brick wall of no mercy at the end of the book when Redmond takes his leave of his African traveling companions (as well as that moment when he is torn from his new gorilla "baby").

    There truly is no mercy from poverty that enslaves its captives to hardship, disease and likely early death whereever it strikes in the world as Mr. OHanlon shows us so well. The book has an interesting type ending where the white guy must confront the guilt of being able to leave all this behind while most of those he has grown close with during the adventure cannot.


  2. Another excellent book from Mr. O’Hanlon. I previously read Into the Heart of Borneo and In Trouble Again. This is just as good and just as important. I wondered at first –the start was so abrupt and desultory. But I was soon taken in by the exotic setting, the bizarre but engaging real-life characters, and the curious, almost dream-like parade of events. If this were fiction (and it does read like a novel), an accurate label for it might be magical realism. I am perplexed at O’Hanlon being touted on the cover as ‘By far our funniest travel writer’ and ‘As funny as ever’. Sure there are some very amusing incidents in the book, but why are yaws, malaria, sleeping sickness, abject poverty, and crippling intellectual superstition considered funny? Not to mention bedbugs (in Biblical numbers), Congo floor maggots, driver ants (again in Biblical numbers), HIV and Ebola fever. O’Hanlon certainly does not play up the humour angle. On one level this is a book of horror to me. Stephen King should read it to get fresh ideas. On another level this is a positive, inspiring work. O’Hanlon is good company –he is brilliant, talented, compassionate, and a genuinely good man. So is his American travel-mate, Lary Shaffer. Shaffer had been totally incapacitated with multiple sclerosis in the past and had fought his way back to health. He seems almost super-human at times in his endurance and unflappability. These are people you would be honoured to have as friends. It hurts them to see the suffering and waste in the human beings and animals they see along the journey. They do what they can to help, but two guys with backpacks, no matter how smart or how well prepared, can only do so much. And there is so much to be done. The Congo is such a messed up place.

    The Congolese that O’Hanlon travels with are an interesting but mostly unsympathetic group. Marcellin Agnagna, the ‘educated’ representative of the government, is a bullying, arrogant and verbally abusive individual. He says his job is to protect the forest elephants, which are being slaughtered into extinction for their ivory, but his main focus seems to be to fleece O’Hanlon for as much as he can. His secondary focus, which he shares with the cock-eyed, syphilitic Nze, is to copulate with as many young women along the way as possible. O’Hanlon is constantly berated, ridiculed and insulted for being a representative of the white race which enslaved and transported the blacks in the past. No matter that the Bantus in the outback towns ‘own’ pygmies and treat them as slaves right now, in the 21st century.

    This is a difficult book to read at times because of what it documents, but you learn so much from reading it. In addition to the wonderful exotic biology, there is much valuable knowledge casually shared between O’Hanlon and Shaffer in their conversations. O’Hanlon also goes off periodically on informative and poignant tangents, such as his last visits with his friend and fellow author Bruce Chatwin, who died in the late 1980s of AIDS. Chatwin’s last advice to his friend was ‘Never kill yourself. Not under any circumstances. Not even when you are told you have AIDS.’

    This is a wonderful, honest, magical book. It will make you feel very uncomfortable at times, and glad you have what you have and live where you live. The author went through a lot to bring it to you.


  3. "No Mercy" is a very lively, very detailed, very sensitive description of what could have been the trip of a lifetime, though O'Hanlon has taken and written about many adventurous journeys. What I admire most about the book is that O'Hanlon doesn't flinch before any aspect of real life, be it positive or negative, admirable or deeply disturbing. He describes it all, without regard for what is politically correct or commonly assumed.
    Great descriptions of flora and fauna. The text is accompanied by excellent photos.


  4. _No Mercy_ by Redmond O'Hanlon is an interesting, at times quite good, but for me ultimately frustrating travelogue of the author's journey into the deep interior of The People's Republic of the Congo (not to be confused with Zaire).

    The book started out very strongly, recounting the vivid first impressions of O'Hanlon and his travel companion Dr. Lary Shaffer in Brazzaville, consulting a feticheuse (a type of fortune teller), negotiating the complex and tangled government bureaucracy, and trying to arrange an expedition into the deep interior. Why go into the jungles of the country, far up the Congo River one may reasonably ask? O'Hanlon wanted to journey to the remote northern forests of the country, meet the Pygmies, journey by dugout boat to the headwaters of the Motaba River, abandon the boats, walk east through a vast and poorly known swamp jungle, and eventually make his way to a very remote lake, Lake Télé, reported home of Mokele-mbembe, a dinosaur reported to be alive today in the Congo. That's all. Well O'Hanlon did at any rate, Shaffer had evidently planned to leave the expedition before O'Hanlon and his future companions set out for Lake Télé. Shaffer, continually reminded O'Hanlon he couldn't believe he was in the Congo to begin with, let alone heading up the Congo and proceeding on foot through a portion of its dense tropical forest.

    His expedition plan sounded quite adventurous to me, if not always accepted by government bureaucrats; one asked, "his voice full of hostility, "you have come to investigate some kind of dinosaur? To make fun of us? To mock the African?" Eventually though permission was granted and O'Hanlon, Shaffer, and several other locals set on their way.

    Much of the expedition, particularly early on, was quite interesting, if merely just describing what the author saw. His account of traveling on a virtual floating city, the steamer _Impfondo_ with its attached barges was quite vivid, a town that slowly made its way upriver, different areas of the steamer and the attached barges inhabited by different social strata, of men, women, children, people fishing, selling things, trading with people in dugouts that met the boat from various villages along the shore, sometimes trading for a time, other times tying up and journeying with the entire configuration for some ways. People were born on the boat-barge combination, and unfortunately people died as well.

    Unlike many travel writers, O'Hanlon was evidently keenly interested in natural history, particularly birds, and never failed to point out fascinating animals he saw and more interestingly provide good descriptions of them and many times some facts about them. He saw hammerkops for instance, "[a] bird with a genus all its own, its place in science almost as mysterious as its role in myth," at one time thought to be related to herons, flamingos, or storks. Many in Africa leave the hammerkop alone, its very name often taboo, believed to be a sorcerer among birds, able to compel birds of other species to come and build its massive nest. He spied the Congo blue-breasted kingfisher, a "freak of a kingfisher," a species that never goes fishing but rather lives in the forest and makes meals of insects, spiders, toads, and millipedes. A huge rodent, an enormous, white-bellied, grey-backed Giant Gambian rat nearly gave him a heart attack one night as it accidentally made his way into his sleeping chambers one night before bounding out in a panic. He was driven out of another hut by a huge mass of driver ants, moving colonies of ants that according to Shaffer can travel in groups twenty-two million strong, much larger than the "mere two million" that number South American army ant swarms. The author also noted interesting plants from time to time, such as the oil-palm, so vital to many in the Congo region, as oil can be obtained from both the flesh of the nut and the seeds, its oil being used for cooking and in making soap and margarine, its sap collected to make ready-made palm wine.

    The book's first half was riveting to me and I looked forward to what new sights would greet the expedition as they went further upriver, leaving the _Impfondo_, proceeding on much smaller boats, and eventually on foot. However, at some point, the book really started to bog down for me. More and more the narrative related the sometimes funny, often just tedious fights, complaints, and bickering of his three local companions, which by the end of the book the reader becomes pretty well familiar with. There is Marcellin, educated overseas, a scientist, but clearly frustrated by many aspects of life in Africa, by the burdens of being a "big man," of out of work relatives feeling that the success of one of their own is their success and Marcellin obligated by societal mores to lets his relatives move in, eat his food, and just make themselves at home. He also seemed frustrated by his African companions, complaining that they were clearly uneducated men, but Marcellin by his words and deeds showing that he was very much a part of that culture as well, as like the others he was continually seeking female companionship every night in every village they visited and while scoffing at some supernatural beliefs, such as fetishes, seemed to accept others (when one friend asked how a local sorcerer who could shapechange into an elephant every night might affect his elephant studies, Marcellin appeared to seriously consider the problem). Manou, another companion, was a much more gentle soul, not as brash or as sex-crazed as Marcellin, but even more frustrated as he would never get the education that Marcellin had and anything he owned was taken outright from him by his elders. While these portraits were interesting they tended to take up too much of the book as it neared its end, overshadowing more interesting aspects of the expedition and were sometimes just plain annoying.


  5. I cannot fathom all the glowing reviews of No Mercy. First of all, the book crams 450 small-font pages into what should have been a 300-page book. Second, it took O'Hanlon over sixty pages just to begin his journey. My editor would have roasted me for that. Then he moves wrenchingly slow, presenting long conversations word for word, describing every single bird in minute detail, describing his boring, lecherous guides, telling of a poisonous snake (Wow!) that a companion killed. I'm not a beginner in true adventure. Give me Krakauer's Into Thin Air, or Philbrick's In the Heart of the Sea, but deliver me from O'Hanlon's drivel. I finally had to stop reading about halfway through.


Read more...


Posted in Africa (Wednesday, October 8, 2008)

Simply Safari Written by Daryl Balfour and Sharna Balfour. By Abbeville Press. The regular list price is $45.00. Sells new for $23.92. There are some available for $22.49.
Read more...

Purchase Information
3 comments about Simply Safari.
  1. I loved the first half of this book. It's filled with dreamy mosquito netted fantasy rooms and is a real delight to look at. The second half,in general, seemed to feature more contrived sort of interiors, a little bit too over the top for me. Overall a really pretty book full of lovely pictures and a totally different world. A must for anyone with rustic/tribal/colonial sort of tendencies. I must admit I haven't read a great deal of the text yet so I can't comment on that, but it's the pictures that make this sort of book worthwhile and there are plenty of those.


  2. This is a book that captures the beauty of elegance in the wilderness. The photographs are impressive and, together with intelligently written text, successfully convey the ambiance of those lodges and tent camps shown.


  3. This book is sooo absolutely amazing. I looked through this book & was in AWE with how B-e-a-u-t-i-f-u-l-l-y put together it is!

    There are gorgeous photographs of 26 lodges of the southern African states from: Botswana, Mozambique, Namibia, South Africa, Swaziland, Zambia & Zimbabwe! You will enjoy looking & reading through this book time after time.

    The wonderful picture's in this book will inspire you if your are decorating or wanting to decorate in African Safari, British Colonial or just wanting to add a splash of Safari to your life. Obviously there are items that you cannot get easily in America, but some of idea's in this book can be found @ Cost-Plus World Market or Pier1 Imports!

    I ordered this book along with "Safari Chic" & although both books are wonderful, "Simply Safari" is my personal favorite!! It is a large book, ALMOST: 10x13" & has 192 pages (including addresses & index in case you decide to visit these lodges).

    I think you'll be super happy with this book ... I am!


Read more...


Posted in Africa (Wednesday, October 8, 2008)

To Timbuktu for a Haircut: A Journey Through West Africa Written by Rick Antonson. By Dundurn Press. The regular list price is $26.99. Sells new for $16.47. There are some available for $16.77.
Read more...

Purchase Information
3 comments about To Timbuktu for a Haircut: A Journey Through West Africa.
  1. Reading Rick Antonson's book on Mali took be back to 2006 and my quick trip through Mali. Having visited many of the places that Rick featured it was a great experience to witness someone who had been there before me.
    As a travel book I believe it to be superb and a great way to feel Mali.
    And lo and behold he loved the same things about the places - Mopti, Dogon, Timbuktu and Essakane - that I came to treasure. He writes very well, he experiences the real feel of the Niger River area, he captures you into his journey. And the two things that he loved most about Mali, that is Timbuktu and its manuscripts and Le Pays Dogon; his time in both locations will send me on a return trip to Mali to further experience that remarkable country. This book on Africa is as close to a real guide as anything written by Paul Theroux or investigated by Lonely Planet. I so enjoyed this book.


  2. To Timbuktu for a Haircut is a great read. It's easy to imagine the author's journey and experience what he experienced...and want to pursue similar experiences. This is really about more than a journey across West Africa. It may sound a bit trite, but this book can help motivate you to pursue that journey you have always wanted to pursue -- whether it is a trip to Timbuktu or Antarctica or a "journey" of a different sort. Thanks for writing this book!


  3. I really enjoy travel writing, particularly when a book is written with humour (i.e., Bill Bryson). This book was terrific! The author goes on such an incredible journey and meets such unique characters. He is so descriptive that I could truly conjur up what he saw, ate, etc. There were laugh out loud moments. All in all, a wonderful journey, written beautifully by a great writer.


Read more...


Posted in Africa (Wednesday, October 8, 2008)

Senegal (including Gambia) Map by ITMb Written by International Travel Maps and Books. By International Travel Maps and Books. The regular list price is $12.95. Sells new for $9.10. There are some available for $11.85.
Read more...

Purchase Information
No comments about Senegal (including Gambia) Map by ITMb.






Posted in Africa (Wednesday, October 8, 2008)

Tanzania: The Land and Its People Written by John Ndembwike. By New Africa Press. The regular list price is $12.95. Sells new for $7.49. There are some available for $8.50.
Read more...

Purchase Information
1 comments about Tanzania: The Land and Its People.
  1. I give the book 4 stars because it is very inexpensive and probably adequate for most travelers. The book is also written by a native Tanzanian, which is nice. They edited and published it cheap though. You'll notice different fonts on different pages and some poor grammar and spelling in a few spots. Those are just aesthetic problems though.

    The content of the book provides an adequate overview of Tanzania. It is a good way of learning some basics about the country if you are traveling there. Don't expect a ton of depth though. It is a short book, so many things are covered somewhat superficially. I was traveling to Tanzania to do counseling and wanted a book to help me understand the culture. It was not sufficient for my purposes, but is probably more than adequate for the average traveler. I definitely learned some things. I paired this book with a language course, the Lonely Traveler phrase book, and another book about AIDS in Northern Tanzania. Together, they told me enough about the culture and customs to get by without violating any major taboos.


Read more...


Page 23 of 250
10  13  14  15  16  17  18  19  20  21  22  23  24  25  26  27  28  29  30  31  32  33  40  50  60  70  80  90  100  110  120  130  140  150  160  170  180  190  200  210  220  230  240  250  
The Hotel Book: Great Escapes Africa
Kilimanjaro: The Great White Mountain of Africa
Namibia Space
Marrakesh Encounter (Best Of)
Botswana - Culture Smart!: a quick guide to customs and etiquette (Culture Smart!)
No Mercy: A Journey Into the Heart of the Congo
Simply Safari
To Timbuktu for a Haircut: A Journey Through West Africa
Senegal (including Gambia) Map by ITMb
Tanzania: The Land and Its People

Copyright © 2005
*Amazon.com prices and availability subject to change.
Last updated: Wed Oct 8 00:37:33 EDT 2008