Good news

August 15, 2009

The shipment of my book, Buen Camino – beyond the journey – will arrive in Auckland at the end of September which means that by early October copies will be available in the bookstores.  As I get further confirmation on which bookstores these will be, I’ll post the information on my ‘where to buy’ page.

Buen Camino is also being distributed in Spain via Gordon Bell who will be selling my books directly to pilgrims walking the trail from his refugio on el Camino and bookshops en route.

I am arranging distribution into Australia from February next year.

Internationally it can still be purchased through Amazon.com

I see the first chapter is available on Amazon for readers to whet their appetites on. Cool!

http://www.Amazon.com/

Zanzibar

August 11, 2009

Reading through my diary I kept during our Cape to Khartoum African travels, I found this nostalgic entry I made in  Zanzibar.

As night falls, fires in little brazziers are lit and stalls with an amazing variety of food are set up alongside the water. We walked slowly through the long passage of stalls, savouring the delicious smells and trying to decide what to choose for our dinner. There were  long skewers with thick prawns impaled head to tail;  skewers with bite sized pieces of marlin, barracuda, kingfish, snapper and tuna lying in long rows on the table. In the stall next door were more skewers, this time of calamari, ariekriekel and mussels. Huge crabs and crayfish were piled on top of one another and circles of octopus tentacles lay in mouthwatering temptation in yet another pile.

There were stalls making mini Zanzibar pizzas from hand-sized thin pieces of dough which were rolled out with the flat of the hand and then expertly and rapidly stretched until they were paper thin. A filling of minced meat,  and sauce was added and then a raw egg was  quickly broken into the middle and mushed around. The dough was rolled closed with great speed and expertise and placed on a waiting skottel to cook while we salivated eagerly nearby.

Machines, that looked like the wringers of old-fashioned washing machines squeezed the juice from sugar cane while somebody turned the handle furiously. The last stalls were piled high with salads, samoosas, falaffels and sweet pancakes with banana and chocolate for desert.

When I reached Ethiopia in my African journey I saw  more intense human suffering here than anywhere else we had travelled thus far. The images in the story of The Miracle of St. George are real (see short stories.) I did not know that leprosy, an easily treatable disease, still existed in the world. People died in the streets of Addis Ababa every day and the poverty and misery I saw everywhere in this green, verdant, beautiful country seemed inexplicable. The worst was seeing the homeless children, some as young as two, dressed in rags, holding hands as they walked in and out of the traffic of Addis. I remember reaching a village near Gondor where food aid was being handed out, where the sight of such extreme poverty finally grew too much for us to bear. It was like a film set with great crowds of extras, dressed in biblical dress, waiting in the hot sun for some food. They sat patiently all holding black umbrellas above their heads – it was quite surreal. The cattle and goats were stick thin with protruding ribs and hip bones The people were lethargic and glazed-eyed with sticky flies crawling over their skin. It was at this scene of utter human misery that we stopped our Landrover and unanimously decided to turn around and leave Ethiopia and and head towards Sudan.

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