Sir Henry Morton Stanley, greatest of African explorers, was one of the most fascinating late Victorian adventurers. Born into poverty and illegitimacy, he survived a series of incredible adventures at sea and in the USA to emerge as a journalist of talent after the American Civil War. His coverage of the British Ethiopian expedition to chastise Emperor Theodore brought him to the attention of James Gordon Bennett who commissioned him to find David Livingstone in Africa, the greatest single feat in African exploration.
Yet behind the public man lay a disturbed personality. A pathological liar with sadomasochistic tendencies, Stanley's achievements exacted a high human cost. As Frank McLynn's masterly study shows, his foundation of the Congo Free State on behalf of Leopold II of Belgium, and the Emin Pasha Relief Expedition were both dubious enterprises which tarnished his reputation, revealing the complex - and often troubling - relationship that Stanley had with Africa.
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Review:
"This vast book is packed with adventures" (Independent)
"Excellent...entertaining, well-researched and scrupulously annotated" (Spectator)
"Meticulously and grippingly told" (Evening Standard)
"Splendid, deep-delving biography" (Guardian)
"Captivating" (Literary Review)
From the Publisher:
'He has built up the narrative from the widest possible range of sources. He has integrated into a single man's story analyses of almost every subject that touched upon Stanley's life, so that one is finally presented with a portrait not only of an individual, but also an entire society and its ethos-another biography of Stanley will not only be unnecessary, but almost impossible, for years to come.' Mark Cocker, Sunday Telegraph
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- PublisherPimlico
- Publication date2004
- ISBN 10 0712605657
- ISBN 13 9780712605656
- BindingPaperback
- Number of pages928
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Rating