Archives for the ‘Books’ Category

Book Review: Blood River – A Journey To Africa’s Broken Heart

By Lee Ridley • Dec 29th, 2008 • Category: Books

It’s a widely accepted fact that there are few places left on the planet that have yet to be penetrated by the great white explorer. Some hidden corners of New Guinea and Ecuador may still throw up hoards of xenophobic, stick-wielding natives, but no longer do our world maps still have uncharted territories marked as [...]



Book Review: Bradt Congo by Sean Rorison

By Dean Farisian • Apr 4th, 2008 • Category: Books

PBs’ very own crackpot, the inimitable Dean Farisian, reviews the latest offering from the Bradt Guides collection – The Bradt Travelguide to The Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC)



Book Review – Bradt Rwanda Travelguide

By Lee Ridley • Mar 13th, 2007 • Category: Books

Bradt Rwanda Travelguide – Janice Booth and Philip Briggs.
The first time I picked up a Bradt Travelguide, I wasn’t sure what to expect. Another Rough Guide? Another Let’s Go? Footprint or Lonely Planet perhaps? What I found was a new style that had certain similarities to some of the others, but at the same [...]



Review – The Bradt Travelguide To Uganda

By Lee Ridley • Feb 10th, 2006 • Category: Books

Guidebooks for the world’s dark places? – Lee Ridley reviews the Bradt Travelguide to Uganda.



War Junkie by Jon Steele

By Rob Wood • Jul 3rd, 2004 • Category: Books

Few people know the main players in Red October, the Russian parliamentary siege of 1993 and even fewer people know why in 1994 the Hutu Tribe went on a killing rampage of Tutsi civilians. The fact is that few people in the wider world really care. Jon Steele, however was at both of these [...]



Book Review: “Setting the East Ablaze” by Peter Hopkirk

By lukebrown • Oct 10th, 2003 • Category: Books

(Oxford University Press – 252 pages)
Reviewer – Luke Brown
Having seized power of Russia in the 1917 Revolution and being subsequently disappointed that it didn’t have a snowballing effect on Europe, the murderous, tyrannical, communist dictator Lenin decided that it was through the East that he could hope to conquer the West. As Britain was considered [...]



Book Review: “The Great Game” by Peter Hopkirk

By lukebrown • Sep 15th, 2003 • Category: Books

(Oxford University Press – 562 pages)
Reviewer – Luke Brown
Posted: 15 September, 2003

Although the phrase “The Great Game” was immortalised [...]