Review:
"as detailed in this thoroughly engrossing new book, Crazy River: Exploration and Folly in East Africa, Grant's quest for adventure and discovery didn't go unrewarded." --Tucson Weekly
"To discover Africa is a quest that has burned away at the European soul since Ptolemy. Richard Grant goes on his own by bus, boat and foot to reach the source of the (White) Nile and find out what really drives Africa." --San Francisco Book Review
"Armchair explorers, rejoice! Richard Grant has gone where we dare not and brought back the news in all its rich, harrowing and lucid detail. The best book about Africa since Paul Theroux's Dark Star Safari." --T.C. Boyle, author of The Women and When the Killing's Done
"Heading for Tanzania, intent on exploration- a first descent of the Malagarasi River-, Richard Grant instead finds himself in the shadow of Burton and Speke, Stanley and Livingston on an altogether unexpected frontier of the unknown- the reality of contemporary Africa. The result is a kaleidoscopic romp through chaos, contradiction, madness and wonder. A fierce account, honestly told, and refreshingly frank." -Wade Davis, author of One River and Into the Silence
"In his last book when he was being chased by killers in Mexico for a couple days I questioned Richard Grant's sanity in trying to be the first to travel the length of Tanzania's Malagarasi River. The hippos and crocodiles are the problem, also the dreadful diseases that daily afflict you. This is a truly wonderful book about East Africa." -Jim Harrison, author of Returning to Earth
"Way back when, we crawled out of the Great Rift in Africa. Richard Grant explains that this ancient womb is the theater of our future. This coming world will have a lot of people fighting over dwindling piles of junk. This future will looks a lot like murder. This time we are all going down Crazy River and forget the damn life jackets. They belong to the past we devoured. Let Richard Grant take you to your new home. But let me warn you: we will not get home before dark." --Charles Bowden, author of Murder City
"As he did in God's Middle Finger, Grant takes us into a world where few willingly venture. His feverish journey from Zanzibar, down an uncharted river and into the broken heart of 21st century Africa is by turns funny, poignant, frightening and deeply disturbing. The future Grant shows us with such lucidity and compassion is one his predecessors, Stanley, Livingstone and Burton could never have envisioned." -John Vaillant, author of The Tiger: A True Story of Vengeance and Survival
Fear and loathing in East Africa as travel writer Grant traverses the ravaged continent in search of a mysterious river and the source of the Nile...Dyspeptic, disturbing and brilliantly realized, Grant's account of Africa is literally unforgettable." --Kirkus Reviews
"A mixture of offbeat characters and travelogue, an entertaining and informative first-person account of a man who's very much out of his element but very keen to learn everything he can." --Booklist
"Grant's gift for getting detoured...makes this one of the year's most surprising adventure books, taking us well beyond jungle and river..part sociologist, part journalist, and "more interested in what happened along the way than achieving goals or reaching destinations." --Men's Journal
Book Description:
* A thrilling story of three months in the most remote spot Tanzania, the Malagarasi river, the 'river of bad spirits
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