Summary | Excerpt | Reviews | Read-Alikes | Genres & Themes | Author Bio
Overland from Cairo to Cape Town
by Paul Theroux
If you liked Dark Star Safari, try these:
by Anna Badkhen
Published Mar 2019
Read ReviewsAn intimate account of life in a West African fishing village, tugged by currents ancient and modern, and dependent on an ocean that is being radically transformed.
by Alexis Okeowo
Published Oct 2018
Read ReviewsIn the tradition of Behind the Beautiful Forevers, this is a masterful, humane work of literary journalism by New Yorker staff writer Alexis Okeowo - a vivid narrative of Africans who are courageously resisting their continent's wave of fundamentalism.
by William deBuys
Published Oct 2015
Read ReviewsAn award-winning author's stirring quest to find and understand an elusive and exceptionally rare species in the heart of Southeast Asia's jungles.
by Sean Wilsey, Matt Weiland
Published Oct 2009
Read ReviewsEdited by Matt Weiland and Sean Wilsey, State by State is a panoramic portrait of America and an appreciation of all fifty states (and Washington, D.C.) by fifty-one of the most acclaimed writers in the nation.
by Alexander Frater
Published Feb 2008
Read ReviewsFrom one of the most celebrated travel writers at work todaya vibrantly observant, witty, utterly captivating account of a lifetimes worth of travel between the Tropics of Cancer and Capricorn.
by Edward Beauclerk Maurice
Published Nov 2006
Read ReviewsAs spare, gleaming, and exhilarating as the Arctic wastes and the gentle, stoic Eskimos who had mastery of this realm. His translucent prose is a sparkling and moving record of a bygone way of life.
by Greg Behrman
Published Jun 2004
Read ReviewsIntensely researched and vividly detailed, The Invisible People is a groundbreaking and compellingly readable account of the appalling destruction caused by more than two decades of American abdication in the face of the defining humanitarian catastrophe of our time.
by Ernest Hemingway
Published Jul 2000
Read ReviewsBoth a revealing self-portrait and dramatic fictional chronicle of his final African safari. Written in 1953, edited and first published by son, Patrick, in 1999.
We Wish To Inform You That Tomorrow We Will Be Killed With Our Families
by Philip Gourevitch
Published Mar 2000
Read ReviewsIn 1994 the Rwandan government implemented a policy that called on everyone in the Hutu majority to murder everyone in the Tutsi minority: 800,000 people were massacred. Read their story.
Polite conversation is rarely either.
Click Here to find out who said this, as well as discovering other famous literary quotes!
Your guide toexceptional books
BookBrowse seeks out and recommends the best in contemporary fiction and nonfiction—books that not only engage and entertain but also deepen our understanding of ourselves and the world around us.