Livingstones Tribe: A Journey From Zanzibar to the Cape
By (Author) Stephen Taylor
HarperCollins Publishers
Flamingo
3rd January 2001
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
African history
Autobiography: adventurers and explorers
Classic travel writing
True stories of discovery
True stories of heroism, endurance and survival
Autobiography: historical, political and military
Geographical discovery and exploration
916.04329
Paperback
272
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 17mm
226g
An extraordinary, passionate and personal journey into Africa's past. 'The most enthralling account out of Africa for years' Daily Mail. 'Livingstone's Tribe is excellent...Taylor is an intelligent and stimulating companion' Financial Times 'At the book's heart is a riveting examination of Livingstone's tribe...the whites of post-independence Africa' Independent on Sunday 'Taylor's expedition into the interior of the continent's colonial past has got everything that such a book should have' Guardian 'Stephen Taylor, a third-generation emigre of British descent, finds a melancholy collection of white misfits and failures...as well as a heroic, dwindling clutch of missionaries still holding the line. The catalogue of theft, corruption, murder and superstition that Taylor chronicles makes appalling, fascinating reading. Yet Taylor is no Colonel Blimp, rather an anti-apartheid liberal who fled the old South Africa and welcomed independence for Mugabe's Zimbabwe' Daily Mail 'Sights and travel experiences are vividly described and people both from Livingstone's and from the other tribes are handled particularly well' Sunday Times
Stephen Taylor was born in South Africa in 1948 and grew up near Johannesburg. At the age of twenty-two he made his home in Britain and travelled for four years in the Middle East and South Asia. From 1980-1987 he was foreign correspondent for The Times and the Observer based in Africa, South-East Asia and Australia. Both his previous books have had African subjects, including Shakas Children: a History of the Zulu People. He works for The Times and is married with two children.