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The Race for Timbuktu: In Search of Africa's
City of Gold
Frank T. Kryza
ISBN: 0060560649
Format: Hardcover, 352pp
Pub. Date: January 2006
Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
List Price: $25.95
BBP Price: $19.46 Save 25%
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FROM THE PUBLISHER
In the first decades of the nineteenth century, no place burned more brightly
in the imagination of European geographers -- and fortune hunters -- than the
lost city of Timbuktu. Africa's legendary City of Gold, not visited by
Europeans since the Middle Ages, held the promise of wealth and fame for the
first explorer to make it there. In 1824, the French Geographical Society
offered a cash prize to the first expedition from any nation to visit Timbuktu
and return to tell the tale. Unwilling to trust in the slender chances of a
lone explorer, the British sent several on their way.
One of the contenders was Major Alexander Gordon Laing, a thirty-year-old army
officer. Handsome and confident, Laing was convinced that Timbuktu was his
destiny, and his ticket to glory. In July 1825, after a whirlwind romance with
Emma Warrington, daughter of the British consul at Tripoli, Laing left the
Mediterranean coast to cross the Sahara. His 2,000-mile journey took on an
added urgency when Hugh Clapperton, a more experienced explorer, set out to
beat him. Apprised of each other's mission by overseers in London who hoped the
two would cooperate, Clapperton instead became Laing's rival, spurring him on
across a hostile wilderness.
Drawing on Laing's dynamic correspondence, including passionate letters to his
beloved Emma and gossip-laden official reports, The Race for Timbuktu follows
Laing's arduous trek across an unforgiving Sahara, battling unpredictable
elements, crippling illness, vicious attacks -- and the clock -- to be the
first white man in centuries to reach the gates of Timbuktu.
In bringing Laing's dramatic story to life, Frank T. Kryza also provides a
narrative history of thefirst phase of the colonization of Africa, which in
less than a century would see nearly every square mile of the continent
occupied by the nations of Europe. An emotionally charged, action-packed,
utterly gripping read, The Race for Timbuktu offers a close, personal look at
the extraordinary people and pivotal events of nineteenth-century African
exploration that changed the course of history and the shape of the modern
world.
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