Selected Product: no picture available | The Ponds of Kalambayi: An African Sojourn Hardcover Author: Mike Tidwell Publisher: Lyons Pr Release Date: 1990-09 ISBN-10: 1558210784 ISBN-13: 9781558210783 List Price: $19.95 Average Customer Rating: | | The White Man's Burden: Why the West's Efforts to Aid the Rest Have Done So Much Ill and So Little Good ISBN-10: 0143038826 ISBN-13: 9780143038825 List Price:$16.00 A Primate's Memoir: A Neuroscientist's Unconventional Life Among the Baboons ISBN-10: 0743202414 ISBN-13: 9780743202411 List Price:$15.00 The Village of Waiting ISBN-10: 0374527806 ISBN-13: 9780374527808 List Price:$16.00 The Behavior Guide to African Mammals: Including Hoofed Mammals, Carnivores, Primates ISBN-10: 0520080858 ISBN-13: 9780520080850 List Price:$34.95 Nine Hills to Nambonkaha: Two Years in the Heart of an African Village ISBN-10: 0312423128 ISBN-13: 9780312423124 List Price:$14.00 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for The Ponds of Kalambayi: An African Sojourn by Mike Tidwell (ISBN-10: 1558210784, ISBN-13: 9781558210783). At this time we have not yet written a review for The Ponds of Kalambayi: An African Sojourn by Mike Tidwell (ISBN-10: 1558210784, ISBN-13: 9781558210783). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com As a freshly trained 23-year-old fish culture extension agent, Tidwell was ill prepared for the remote tribal kingdom in central Zaire called Kalambayi. But his reward, ultimately, was his acceptance by the generous Kalambayans and his ability to share their daily lives. AFRICA | Customer Rating: | This is an amazing book about Africa. For one who has never been there it shows the other half, the half that you don't hear in the news, the part that we all know exists but never hear of it. Love, life, death, courage, tradition. It is a two year long journey dealing with adaptation to a different culture, teaching how to raise fish in the middle of Africa. I got this book as a gift from my sister and have thanked her for it, because didn't just provide with a time for entertainment but it taught me a lot about another culture, taught me about respect for others beliefs. It is heartbreaking, but beautifull. | Great Book | Customer Rating: | | As a returned Peace Corps volunteer who served in francophone Africa (Gabon - 89-91), Mike Tidwell captures the experience better than any other Peace Corps writer I've read. Contrast this book with the Village of Waiting (George Packer) and you'll see what I mean. He also is a master story teller and offers a lot for anyone interested in Africa. | Great Memoir for Any Westerner Going to Live in Africa! | Customer Rating: | | Mike Tidwell's memoir of his two years of Peace Corp work teaching villagers to build fish ponds is about so much more than that. He writes so honestly about what he learned from working closely with his African neighbors and how he came to understand their generosity from an African perspective as opposed to his American perspective. He has so many adventures with the men the Kalambayi region that each chapter taught me something new. Mike shares his doubts about himself and those he works with. He confesses his errors and shares his times of despondency. But all in all I think he feels the way that I do...living in Africa as an American is the best education because you are forever changed...your world of thought is so much larger. I wanted the story to go on and on because every evening I looked forward to being with Mike's world in Zaire. | Surprisingly Good | Customer Rating: | | After deciding that I wanted to apply to the Peace Corps, I began doing online and literary research on the experience as a whole. I bought this book, totally uninterested in how a Caucasion man in Africa would learn to adapt to the local culture and thus be successful at showing the (willing) villagers how to raise "fish farms." Needless to say, this book never has a dull moment, which is a major shock for me. Although he doesn't talk much about the Peace Corps (if at all), he does constantly touch on the topics of attempting to shed his American normalities/viewpoints and just plain adapting to life in his African villages. His cultural adaptation and the frustrations that come along with teaching the locals about fish farming are just two things that make this book a page turner. | The truth about Africa | Customer Rating: | | Having lived and worked in Africa, one of the hardest things to convey to people who have not been there, is how despite poverty and other hardships, Africa is not a sad place. This book does a great job of explaining the beauty and strength of Africa and its people. It also shows that people have good sound reasons for doing what to us initially may seem crazy and irrational. Tidwell's book also does a great job of showing the impact that Africa has on the people who go there. His honesty and examination of both himself and the people he lives with make this book a winner. |
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