

Into Africa: The Epic Adventures of Stanley and Livingstone [Dugard, Martin] on desertcart.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. Into Africa: The Epic Adventures of Stanley and Livingstone Review: Stanley and Livingstone's Eponymous Adventure - Nearly everyone of a certain age knows "Stanley and Livingstone" and the memorable line "Dr. Livingstone, I presume." It's just one of those cultural snippets that gets passed down. Martin Dugard's interesting book gives the story to that shared and brief tidbit. Quite a story it is. Dr. Livingstone was a poor boy who made good in Victorian England by earning the admiration of the better classes through exploration and perseverance in Darkest Africa. He would spend most of his adult life on the continent, greatly expanding European knowledge of the geography and peoples there. First as a missionary and later as a great explorer determined to find the source of the Nile River, Livingstone was in his own way a man of peace with great sympathy for Africa and Africans. He particularly detested the very active slave trade and slave raids run by Arabs between the interior and the central eastern coast of the continent. Henry Stanley started life as poor and unmoored as one could be in that day and age. A young crewman out of England on a boat headed to New Orleans, he see destined to finish an early life as one of those mid 19th century petty criminals and ne'er-do-wells who described the seedy side of life. He managed to enlist in both the Union and Confederate armies and fight for both during the Civil War. He had though developed a passion for reading and found himself in the newspaper business out west as a free lance journalist. This occupation would be his life raft. Eventually ending up at the New York Herald, Stanley showed a willingness to go anywhere and endure great hardship to deliver what would today be considered blockbuster news to the voracious readership each of New York's twenty some papers competed for. Dr. Livingstone's quest for the source of the Nile got him lost, physically weak, and stranded without the resources to get out of the interior. His English patrons and the world feared him lost, and his whereabouts were a source of great concern and focus. Here was Stanley's opportunity. With the promise of his publisher's help (although Stanley had to talk his way into a lot of credit), the journalist outfitted a secret expedition to find Livingstone and bring the story of his demise or rescue to the world. After almost a year of hard slogging through jungle and desert, mutinous porters and expedition members, participation in a native war, dalliance with Arab slavers, death and desperation on the trail and worry that he wouldn't find his needle-in-a-haystack, Stanley arrived at a village to discover a thin, sickly and ragged man much of the world had given up for lost and to whom he was able to greet with the immortal line "Dr. Livingstone I presume." This is a well written adventure book that will fascinate on many levels. It offers a great portrait of Stanley and Livingstone as men and the great hardships that shaped their lives. Nineteenth Century exploration in Africa with all the disease, war, slavery, and beauty are painted well on the author's canvass. The motivations and mindsets of two men-of-action are thoroughly explored. This book weaves all of the above elements into a gripping story that is well worth the time. Review: Double adventure told with suspense - Like many, I already knew the basic story of Stanley's search for Livingstone but this book fleshed out the details of the men and their plights very well. The chapters alternate between Livingstone, Stanley, and the goings on of the RGS (Royal Geographical Society) in London. The Stanley-based chapters counted down the miles separating Stanley and Livingstone which served to build up suspense and I felt myself getting more excited as I closed in on the missionary/explorer myself. Into Africa contrasts the personalities of the two men in accomplishing their goals and as each face the many hardships of African exploration. I was amazed to see the trials these men and some of their porters survived including malaria, smallpox, elephantiasis, war, and the wild beasts of African fame. Dugard's telling leads us through swamps, jungles, grasslands, and mountains across some of the roughest terrains in the world. Temperatures reach the 120s Fahrenheit but our heroes continue their quests. We get to see how the trials devastate the mens' bodies and sometimes feverish minds. The research using the mens' own journals and RGS records is well done, easily readable, and excitingly doled out. I would recommend this book to anyone looking for a true story of exploration and adventure especially because this book contains two of the best. I may have given this volume 5 stars if it had included some useful maps and if the pictures (especially the captions) were a little more viewable on the Kindle edition.

| Best Sellers Rank | #92,161 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #17 in Historical African Biographies (Books) #77 in Expeditions & Discoveries World History (Books) #152 in Traveler & Explorer Biographies |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars (3,782) |
| Dimensions | 5.46 x 0.81 x 8.25 inches |
| Edition | Reprint |
| ISBN-10 | 0767910745 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-0767910743 |
| Item Weight | 11.2 ounces |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 368 pages |
| Publication date | April 13, 2004 |
| Publisher | Crown |
W**H
Stanley and Livingstone's Eponymous Adventure
Nearly everyone of a certain age knows "Stanley and Livingstone" and the memorable line "Dr. Livingstone, I presume." It's just one of those cultural snippets that gets passed down. Martin Dugard's interesting book gives the story to that shared and brief tidbit. Quite a story it is. Dr. Livingstone was a poor boy who made good in Victorian England by earning the admiration of the better classes through exploration and perseverance in Darkest Africa. He would spend most of his adult life on the continent, greatly expanding European knowledge of the geography and peoples there. First as a missionary and later as a great explorer determined to find the source of the Nile River, Livingstone was in his own way a man of peace with great sympathy for Africa and Africans. He particularly detested the very active slave trade and slave raids run by Arabs between the interior and the central eastern coast of the continent. Henry Stanley started life as poor and unmoored as one could be in that day and age. A young crewman out of England on a boat headed to New Orleans, he see destined to finish an early life as one of those mid 19th century petty criminals and ne'er-do-wells who described the seedy side of life. He managed to enlist in both the Union and Confederate armies and fight for both during the Civil War. He had though developed a passion for reading and found himself in the newspaper business out west as a free lance journalist. This occupation would be his life raft. Eventually ending up at the New York Herald, Stanley showed a willingness to go anywhere and endure great hardship to deliver what would today be considered blockbuster news to the voracious readership each of New York's twenty some papers competed for. Dr. Livingstone's quest for the source of the Nile got him lost, physically weak, and stranded without the resources to get out of the interior. His English patrons and the world feared him lost, and his whereabouts were a source of great concern and focus. Here was Stanley's opportunity. With the promise of his publisher's help (although Stanley had to talk his way into a lot of credit), the journalist outfitted a secret expedition to find Livingstone and bring the story of his demise or rescue to the world. After almost a year of hard slogging through jungle and desert, mutinous porters and expedition members, participation in a native war, dalliance with Arab slavers, death and desperation on the trail and worry that he wouldn't find his needle-in-a-haystack, Stanley arrived at a village to discover a thin, sickly and ragged man much of the world had given up for lost and to whom he was able to greet with the immortal line "Dr. Livingstone I presume." This is a well written adventure book that will fascinate on many levels. It offers a great portrait of Stanley and Livingstone as men and the great hardships that shaped their lives. Nineteenth Century exploration in Africa with all the disease, war, slavery, and beauty are painted well on the author's canvass. The motivations and mindsets of two men-of-action are thoroughly explored. This book weaves all of the above elements into a gripping story that is well worth the time.
E**R
Double adventure told with suspense
Like many, I already knew the basic story of Stanley's search for Livingstone but this book fleshed out the details of the men and their plights very well. The chapters alternate between Livingstone, Stanley, and the goings on of the RGS (Royal Geographical Society) in London. The Stanley-based chapters counted down the miles separating Stanley and Livingstone which served to build up suspense and I felt myself getting more excited as I closed in on the missionary/explorer myself. Into Africa contrasts the personalities of the two men in accomplishing their goals and as each face the many hardships of African exploration. I was amazed to see the trials these men and some of their porters survived including malaria, smallpox, elephantiasis, war, and the wild beasts of African fame. Dugard's telling leads us through swamps, jungles, grasslands, and mountains across some of the roughest terrains in the world. Temperatures reach the 120s Fahrenheit but our heroes continue their quests. We get to see how the trials devastate the mens' bodies and sometimes feverish minds. The research using the mens' own journals and RGS records is well done, easily readable, and excitingly doled out. I would recommend this book to anyone looking for a true story of exploration and adventure especially because this book contains two of the best. I may have given this volume 5 stars if it had included some useful maps and if the pictures (especially the captions) were a little more viewable on the Kindle edition.
N**.
A thorough, well-researched, readable book about this epic 19th Century event.
A thorough, well researched and readable book about this epic event in the 19th century that captivated the attention of the world. I read it on Kindle which lacks good map reading technology, a shortcoming because geography is important part of the story of searching for "the source of the Nile" and the "search for Livingston".
A**R
Riveting story
This is a very well written book that kept my attention the whole way through. This is an incredible story that I knew very little about. An entertaining and educational read.
Q**M
One of the most thrilling books I ever read
This book took over my free time for a couple days. I was not interested in the subject but I read a couple other books by Dugard and I cannot get enough now. So I read this. And now I'm very interested in the subject. There is so much to talk about but I'll just tell you, the way he writes, you get a real sense of how hard the lives of these men were. The bugs and the disease. It wore them out and shortened their lives. None of us could endure it. Highly recommended.
Z**A
Brings To Life A Fascinating Time
This book is far deeper than the title would lead one to expect. Yes, it's about two explorer giants -- Livingstone and Stanley --and their various ordeals in mid-19th Century Africa. But it also is about their times, in which the modern world began taking shape. In telling the story of how journalist Stanley searched for missionary/explorer Livingstone in the underexplored terrain of what is now Tanzania, the book touches on the last days of slavery, the early days of African exploration and the growth of British colonialism, and extols the strength of the human spirit and its capacity for endurance. It was a time when geography dominated public interest and worldwide attention was paid to Livingstone's quest to find the source of the Nile. Author Dugard has done his research most thoroughly and brings to the book both fact and suspense. It's rare that a history book will keep you riveted as if it were a modern thriller, but this one will. From now on, when you hear "Dr. Livingstone, I Presume..." you'll know, as they say, "the rest of the story...."
S**Y
Glad to have purchased this.
Very nice. Well done.
B**R
Die Geschichte der Entwicklung Afrikas und des großen Einflusses der Araber und des Islams ist ein interessantes Nebenprodukt dieses Werkes. Exakt und ohne lästigen Kommentar geschrieben.
J**N
I loved this book. I get through maybe 20 history books a year but this is one of the most enjoyable I've ever read. Thanks to Stanley's diary there is a lot of information about the perils he faced so there's plenty of detail and a real insight into the characters involved. And what perils. Virtually every few pages describe a new threat to his mission, something which would have caused lesser mortals to give up and go home. Perhaps the best thing though is the background about the truly awful life he had had before becoming a journalist which made him absolutely determined that he would succeed in his mission and gain the World's respect, whatever the cost. This gives the story real human interest. Well written, fascinating and I actually missed reading it when it was finished. I loved it.
J**P
Le récit porte non seulement sur les premiers explorateurs partis à la recherche des sources du Nil au XIXe siècle (Speke, Burton...) et des controverses qui précédaient ou qui s'ensuivaient mais aussi et surtout sur Stanley et Livingstone, le dernier parti pour enfin trouver ce Saint Graal du continent noir, le premier parti pour retrouver la trace du second. Même si la trame est entièrement historique, l'ouvrage se lit comme un roman et est recommandé par Bill Bryson, écrivain-voyageur américain que je vous recommande chaudement (A lire notamment: in a sunburned country sur l'Australie, son exploration passée, ses dangers, les mésaventures de l'auteur, etc.) Into Africa n'est cependant pas à mettre entre toutes les mains 1°) parce qu'il faut maîtriser la langue de Shakespeare, bien sûr 2°) parce qu'il faut parfois avoir le coeur bien accroché pour digérer les descriptions des moeurs de certaines tribus, des maladies, des attaques des animaux carnivores. En tout cas une chose est sure: vous admirerez ces aventuriers d'un âge révolu qui risquaient plus leur vie que nos aventuriers contemporains suréquipés et survaccinés...
C**N
This was a wonderful read, really enjoyed the two characters, such endurance and bravery, in a time long gone
G**Y
Consiglierei questo libro a chiunque fosse interessato all'appassionante vicenda di Stanley e Livingstone o a chi volesse semplicemente sapere cosa significava essere un esploratore nell'Africa nera in quegli anni. Il racconto è molto scorrevole ed allo stesso tempo ricco di interessanti dettagli. Sarebbe stato bello trovare a fine libro o all'inizio dei capitoli le mappe dei luoghi descritti.
Trustpilot
5 days ago
2 days ago