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Crossing the Heart of Africa

An Odyssey of Love and Adventure

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Here is the amazing true story of Julian Smith, who retraced the journey of legendary British explorer Ewart "the Leopard" Grogan, the first man to cross the length of Africa, in hopes of winning the heart of the woman he loved.

In 1898 the dashing young British explorer Ewart "the Leopard" Grogan was in love. In order to prove his mettle to his beloved—and her aristocratic stepfather—he set out on a quest to become the first person to walk across Africa, "a feat hitherto thought by many explorers to be impossible" (New York Times, 1900).

In 2007 thirty-five-year-old American journalist Julian Smith faced a similar problem with his girlfriend of six years ... and decided to address it in the same way Grogan had more than a hundred years before: he was going to retrace the Leopard's 4,500-mile journey for love and glory through the lakes, volcanoes, savannas, and crowded modern cities of Africa.

Crossing the Heart of Africa is the unforgettable account of twin adventures, as Julian beautifully interweaves his own contemporary journey with Grogan's larger-than-life tale of charging elephants, cannibal attacks, deadly jungles, and romantic triumph.

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    • AudioFile Magazine
      Feeling overwhelmed at the prospect of his upcoming wedding and the the lifelong commitment of marriage, Julian Smith decided to follow the path of explorer Ewart Grogran. The Victorian made a two-year overland trek across the length of Africa in the hope of gaining the hand of his love, Gertrude. Narrator Michael Goldstrom adopts an introspective, understated tone in recounting details of Smith's relationship and doubts, and he's engaging as he delivers the colorful Grogran's own story. Goldstrom's African accents help to bring verisimilitude to the dialogue and adventures. As the author acknowledges, the two parallel stories are, in fact, not very similar. But the journeys, both personal and physical, are intriguing, and Goldstrom does a wonderful job of presenting them to the listener. S.E.G. (c) AudioFile 2013, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      November 22, 2010
      Smith, who writes for Outside and National Geographic, offers a perilous saga of commitment and cannibals in this travel memoir. Saying farewell to his bachelorhood, Smith prepares for his trip to the altar with a trip through Africa, retracing a little-known 4,500-mile route from the Cape of Good Hope to Cairo first traveled on foot in 1899 by explorer Ewart Scott Grogan. In Grogan, Smith sees a man who tackled the arduous for love and fortune, one with answers for his own self doubt; in Smith, readers find a thoughtful, observant commitment-phobe who uses Grogan's adventures as both reference and inspiration for a picturesque narrative. In Malawi, just south of where Grogan hired intrepid Watonga helpers, Smith finds Madonna and adoption the hot topic. Grogan knew isolation; Smith has a cellphone. Integral but less compelling is Smith's romance with his girlfriend, Laura. His happy moral—"compared to making a marriage work, crossing Africa is easy"—may seem more a reprieve than a revelation.

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  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

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  • English

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