Praise for The Healing Land
"Isaacson's sensible writing about the Bushmen's drunken, violent
life in exile from their lands is hugely enriched by his sense of
what it might mean when healers talk to lions or men become
leopards in a trance. The survival of the Bushmen is tangled up
with the story of Isaacson's own family's longing for the Africa
they once knew, as irrational and exasperating and sometimes as
lovely as a dream." --Michael Pye, The New York Times Book
Review"Isaacson provides a welcome update to the old nobel-savages
sterotypse with his unflinching portrait of a people riven by
government relocation, alcoholism, and domestic violence."
--Outside Magazine"Alternately distressing, uplifting and tragic".
The Healing Land is both a love song and a long, mournful cry for
remembrance" Isaacson recounts the plight of the Bushmen of the
Kalahari and their vanishing culture without rancor, yet his plea
splinters the heart." --Retha Oliver, San Antonio Express-News"A
moving account of a remarkable personal journey through the
Kalahari desert. Part travel writing, part history of the Bushmen,
part personal quest, [The Healing Land] records what author Rupert
Isaacson finds in the silent, empty desert spaces." --The Portland
Skanner"[Isaacson] delivers a worthwhile account of the few
remaining nomadic Bushmen in southern Africa. . . . [The Healing
Land ] is more than just a travel memoir; it's a powerful
sociopolitical study and a tribute to the marginalized indigenous
peoples of the Kalahari Desert." --Katie Millbauer, Seattle
Weekly
"Readers come away with respect for the struggles of all indigenous
people, coupled with an awareness that they may not live
particularly pretty lives themselves." --Publishers Weekly"Isaacson
writes simply and well. . . . His images are sometimes as exotic as
those conjured by his relatives, but his story is warmer and more
empathetic. Though history, adventure, and social commentary
intermingle with the mysticism of legendary healers and trance
dances, the book remains a journalistic report on a clash of
civilizations and a microcosmic portrayal of a continent's
evolution." --Edward K. Owusu-Ansah, Library Journal
"This heart-wrenching story has connections worldwide with
Indigenous peoples' struggle for survival and identity. Isaacson's
personal journey with the Bushmen of southern Africa brings you up
close to the urgency of their present displacement, even as he
connects it with their long heritage of 'death, disaster, and
despair.'" --Hazel Rochman, Booklist"[This] story... has never been
told... by a narrator so openhearted, optimistic, and vulnerable to
enchantment... Full of mystery, magic and strange coincidence.
Highly recommended." --Rian Malan"The Kalahari is a place, says the
dynamic young author of this book, where the skin between this
world and the other-the world of power-is exceedingly thin. The
multiple crossings of this membrane . . . structure a page-turning
non-fiction account, one which many readers have found unable to
put down." --Dr. Megan Biesele, Professor of Anthropology,
University of Texas"A more clear-sighted view [of the Bushmen] is
long overdue-which makes Rupert Isaacson's book most welcome."
--The Economist"A beautifully written account that simultaneously
intrigues, educates, and fascinates." --Marie Claire"This is a
traveller's book as well as a memoir, with a skein of mysticism
running through it. It is well written, engaging, and enlightening.
Isaacson lets the people he meets speak for themselves . . . and
through his work, in quite a strange way, the Kalahari too. All the
reader needs to do is hear it." --Johannesburg Citizen"A dark
delight of a Kalahari feast." --Cape Argus
The author of several guidebooks (e.g., Southern Africa on the Wild Side), Isaacson grew up in London listening to nostalgic stories of the Kalahari from relatives, and his desire to visit the strange and mystic land led to a grown man's adventure. Isaacson demystifies the Kalahari of his boyhood imagination to present a sincere and charming chronicle of vanishing lifestyles and a touching account of the Bushmen and their land. His images are sometimes as exotic as those conjured by his relatives, but his story is warmer and more empathetic. Though history, adventure, and social commentary intermingle with the mysticism of legendary healers and trance dances, the book remains a journalistic report on a clash of civilizations and a microcosmic portrayal of a continent's evolution. Isaacson writes simply and well. Recommended for public and academic libraries.-Edward K. Owusu-Ansah, CUNY Coll. of Staten Island Lib., NY Copyright 2003 Cahners Business Information.
Praise for The Healing Land
"Isaacson's sensible writing about the Bushmen's drunken, violent
life in exile from their lands is hugely enriched by his sense of
what it might mean when healers talk to lions or men become
leopards in a trance. The survival of the Bushmen is tangled up
with the story of Isaacson's own family's longing for the Africa
they once knew, as irrational and exasperating and sometimes as
lovely as a dream." --Michael Pye, The New York
Times Book Review"Isaacson provides a welcome update to the
old nobel-savages sterotypse with his unflinching portrait of a
people riven by government relocation, alcoholism, and domestic
violence." --Outside Magazine"Alternately distressing,
uplifting and tragic". The Healing Land is both a love
song and a long, mournful cry for remembrance" Isaacson recounts
the plight of the Bushmen of the Kalahari and their vanishing
culture without rancor, yet his plea splinters the heart." --Retha
Oliver, San Antonio Express-News"A moving account of a
remarkable personal journey through the Kalahari desert. Part
travel writing, part history of the Bushmen, part personal quest,
[The Healing Land] records what author Rupert Isaacson finds
in the silent, empty desert spaces." --The Portland
Skanner"[Isaacson] delivers a worthwhile account of the few
remaining nomadic Bushmen in southern Africa. . . . [The
Healing Land ] is more than just a travel memoir; it's a powerful
sociopolitical study and a tribute to the marginalized indigenous
peoples of the Kalahari Desert." --Katie Millbauer, Seattle
Weekly
"Readers come away with respect for the struggles of all
indigenous people, coupled with an awareness that they may not live
particularly pretty lives themselves." --Publishers
Weekly
"Isaacson writes simply and well. . . . His images are
sometimes as exotic as those conjured by his relatives, but his
story is warmer and more empathetic. Though history, adventure, and
social commentary intermingle with the mysticism of legendary
healers and trance dances, the book remains a journalistic report
on a clash of civilizations and a microcosmic portrayal of a
continent's evolution." --Edward K. Owusu-Ansah, Library
Journal
"This heart-wrenching story has connections worldwide with
Indigenous peoples' struggle for survival and identity. Isaacson's
personal journey with the Bushmen of southern Africa brings you up
close to the urgency of their present displacement, even as he
connects it with their long heritage of 'death, disaster, and
despair.'" --Hazel Rochman, Booklist"[This] story... has never
been told... by a narrator so openhearted, optimistic, and
vulnerable to enchantment... Full of mystery, magic and strange
coincidence. Highly recommended." --Rian Malan"The Kalahari is a
place, says the dynamic young author of this book, where the skin
between this world and the other-the world of power-is exceedingly
thin. The multiple crossings of this membrane . . . structure a
page-turning non-fiction account, one which many readers have found
unable to put down." --Dr. Megan Biesele, Professor of
Anthropology, University of Texas"A more clear-sighted view [of the
Bushmen] is long overdue-which makes Rupert Isaacson's book most
welcome." --The Economist"A beautifully written account that
simultaneously intrigues, educates, and fascinates." --Marie
Claire
"This is a traveller's book as well as a memoir, with a
skein of mysticism running through it. It is well written,
engaging, and enlightening. Isaacson lets the people he meets speak
for themselves . . . and through his work, in quite a strange way,
the Kalahari too. All the reader needs to do is hear it."
--Johannesburg Citizen"A dark delight of a Kalahari feast."
--Cape Argus
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