The Last Train to Zona Verde : Overland from Cape Town to Angola

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  • Massachusetts Book Award Nominee for Nonfiction (2014)
  • Banff Mountain Book Award for Adventure Travel (2014)
Note: While we do our best to ensure the accuracy of cover images, ISBNs may at times be reused for different editions of the same title which may hence appear as a different cover.

The Last Train to Zona Verde : Overland from Cape Town to Angola

Regular price
Unit price
per
Compare to estimated retail price: RM80.00 MYR  
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ISBN: 9780141029597
Authors: Theroux P
Publisher: PENGUIN BOOKS
Date of Publication: 2014-01-01
Format: Paperback
Related Collections: Biographies & Memoirs, Travel, History
Related Topics: Memoir, Memoir, Adventure, Travelogue, History
Goodreads rating: 3.88
(rated by 3566 readers)

Description

“Happy again, back in the kingdom of light,” writes Paul Theroux as he sets out on a new journey through the continent he knows and loves best. Theroux first came to Africa as a twenty-two-year-old Peace Corps volunteer, and the pull of the vast land never left him. Now he returns, after fifty years on the road, to explore the little-traveled territory of western Africa and to take stock both of the place and of himself.His odyssey takes him northward from Cape Town, through South Africa and Namibia, then on into Angola, wishing to head farther still until he reaches the end of the line. Journeying alone through the greenest continent, Theroux encounters a world increasingly removed from both the itineraries of tourists and the hopes of postcolonial independence movements. Leaving the Cape Town townships, traversing the Namibian bush, passing the browsing cattle of the great sunbaked heartland of the savanna, Theroux crosses “the Red Line” into a different Africa: “the improvised, slapped-together Africa of tumbled fences and cooking fires, of mud and thatch,” of heat and poverty, and of roadblocks, mobs, and anarchy. After 2,500 arduous miles, he comes to the end of his journey in more ways than one, a decision he chronicles with typically unsparing honesty in a chapter called “What Am I Doing Here?”
 

  • Massachusetts Book Award Nominee for Nonfiction (2014)
  • Banff Mountain Book Award for Adventure Travel (2014)
Note: While we do our best to ensure the accuracy of cover images, ISBNs may at times be reused for different editions of the same title which may hence appear as a different cover.