The Lost World of the Kalahari
A**R
Great, prompt service
Well packaged, as described, quick ship. Very happy.
D**Y
Did I Miss Something?
While he may have a nice command of the English language, and certainly shows talent in his imaginitive descriptions, this book is not about the Kalahari Bushmen. It's like the author needed a topic, and chose the bushman, so he could have a legitimate vessel to spew his philosophies and insights into the world. Does he truly care about the bushman? Half the book's story felt like it was just an excuse to talk about how the author is an outstanding person: fair, rational, logical, intuitive, expert marksman, friend, compassionate; then he also goes off for pages that are seemingly dedicated to demonizing one of the expedition's members, it's like Van Der Post was still holding a grudge from their trip, and somehow had to vent his anger and prove to everyone that he was "in the right".I wouldn't recommend this to someone interested in learning more about ancient cultures or the Kalahari bushmen; I also wouldn't recommend it to someone looking for a book about adventure. While I'm not unhappy I read this book, I do feel like I could have read something with more substance. What I gained from this book is the experience of having read something I truly didn't care for. You know how people talk about not being able to put a book down? I had a hard time picking this one back up...There's gotta be something better on the subject. This book isn't even that memorable of a spiritual journey; the books by Carlos Castaneda, the first few in the Don Juan series -- this is what I'd recommend for a "spiritual" journey.
R**L
Magical
Having never read any of Laurens van de Posts' book prior to this one and having been recommended by a friend to read The Lost World of the Kalahari I was actually very pleasantly delighted by this book. He writes in such a beautifully descriptive, bordering on the romantically poetic style, whilst making the reader wanting to know how the adventure all turns out! He describes the Bushmen that makes you wish you had a time machine so you could also meet them! Just magical
B**W
Exploring Africa's southern desert in search of its original human population
In the 50s, van der Post organized a group to find the last surviving bushmen living in their traditional way, entirely dependent on what they knew of the desert, untainted by modern thought and technology. On his parents' farm, he'd grown up with bushman workers who taught him their language and touched his heart with their stories of slaughter and abuse of their people by black tribes and whites. After immense frustration with his film team, and fruitless weeks in the great swamp in the north of modern Botswana, they start again and contact a family living in the dune country south of there. What they learn, about the very able and intelligent ancestors of all humanity, is both poignant and fascinating to anyone with an interest in culture and the earliest history of people.
L**A
One of the last eye-witness accounts
Well-written and accurate, Laurens managed to meet one of the last truly "wild" bushman groups before this amazing people became overwhelmed by modern "civilization" (to understand how they were ten years before and 20 years after Laurens' visit, I recommend "The Harmless People"). By the time anthropologists and, later, dna-scientists became fascinated by Bushmen, they could no longer hunt as they could when Laurens visited them. Laurens describes the Bushmen and their way of life with intimate care, relating to them as one human being to another. Not like a scientist studying an "object". He is also a good writer, for example when he describes the eland-hunt. I loved to read this book while travelling through Southern Africa. Especially for travellers to Okavango & surroundings, this is a must-read.
R**S
Interesting reading.
This book is just what I was looking for.. It told everything I wanted to know about the Kalahari. It was very well written and very easy to read. It was in great condition and arrived very fast. The size of the words were easy to read. I enjoyed the descriptive wording of the book. Overall great reading.
J**S
Everyone should read this book
A book everyone should read as it describes the fate of a people, a fate which many other peoples have suffered in the past, the big difference being here that the Bushman has been around for longer than most others
A**R
Exactly as advertised. Would purchase from vendor again.
Exactly as advertised. Would purchase from vendor again.
L**E
Rich, warm, passionate writing and beautiful photographs
A wonderful story and full of rich, vivid imagery. I was transported into Nambia and beyond and engrossed entirely on the story of the bushmen - my ancestors. Then ones comes face to face with the stark reality of man's inhumanity to man over the centuries and indeed - given the troubles still in our world, we've leaned nothing at all. Lauren Van der Post exudes the passion and there were times I could actually believe I am standing there in the Kalahari - how wonderful of a writer able to transport you to a time and place.The photographs are stunning and not contrived. This whole book records for all times something so fundamentally important to us all and the realisation that through greed, violence and deviousness we have this innate ability (generalisation of our human nature at its core) to throw away so much and lose that which is valuable. Our lives and future become diminished as a result.So an uplifting book on the one hand and a depressing read in some other aspects.
R**T
Fantastic author
I bought this as a gift for a friend as we recently visited some Bushmen in Botswana and learned a lot from them about their culture and history and their very different lives in the 21st century. I am a Laurens Van Der Post fan - I have most of his books - and now will have to re-read them all! I strongly recommend this particular book if you have any interest in Africa and its history. I know I will become immersed in his poetic language and the plight of the bushmen. A master of his craft.The book did not arrive until the day after the estimated delivery date but I think it may have been despatched from Belgium - perhaps that's why?
P**A
Romance of the Bushmen
This is an account of an expedition to the Kalahari Desert in southern Africa in the late fifties. The author was commissioned to make a TV documentary.It deals with its planning and all the difficulties encountered. The purpose of the trip was to find Bushmen in their natural state.Eventually these people are found.What makes this a good book is van der Post's power of description. It may be that there is embellishment, but he makes something that could have been dull an enthralling read.
J**M
Brilliant example of our lack of understanding of others different to ourselves
A brilliant analysis of how our 'Western values' have ignored and destroyed another way of life we don't understand and consider it 'primitive and beneath us". Well done Laurens Van Der Post
E**K
Disappearance of a culture
Written with poignancy and honesty by someone obsessed with his subject, this is the story of the extermination of the bushman as a people and culture. As a background it helps you understand some of the issues of South Africa today through the interactions between Afrikaner and various black communities. An excellent book.
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