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Dancing with the Witchdoctor [Hardcover]

Kelly James (Author)
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (32 customer reviews)


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Book Description

August 2001

In a series of moving and powerful stories based on her experiences as a private investigator, Kelly James draws us into the mystery that is Africa. A lone woman searching for the lost, she exposes us to a world where truth is ephemeral, and where compassion, though frail, still bleeds through the grit and dust.

In "Detour" she investigates the apparent suicide of a beloved coffee plantation owner in Kenya. In "Gorillas and Banana Beer," James ventures into the jungles of Rwanda to catch a glimpse of the nearly extinct mountain gorillas, only to struggle for survival against merciless poachers in a village of forgotten children. In "Beira," at the edge of Mozambique and anarchy's ground-zero, James searches for a lost woman and her daughter. "Witchdoctor" takes James deep into Turkanaland, otherwise known as "hell on earth," to find a woman doctor who has disappeared. James's sanity and life hang in the balance in a surreal and ferocious closing to this compelling debut work.

Dancing with the Witchdoctor is a testimony to the strength of women, one that reveals how even in a land where flesh withers in the sun, there is no better proof of humanity than when it is on the brink.

--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Kelly James has been an international private investigator on five continents, but it was in Africa that she realized her "greatest adventures and most memorable insights into the human experience." Given the scope of her work--investigating murders, missing persons, safari accidents, and tangled multinational affairs in the face of such obstacles as lions, famine, kidnappers, and tribal warfare--James takes adventure and insight into territory barely imaginable to the rest of us. The result is a stunning quartet of tales of her most memorable adventures.

In the opening story, "Detour," James travels to Mombasa, Kenya, to determine whether the death of a remarkable coffee plantation owner was suicide or murder and to hunt for a missing inheritance. Along the way she discovers a mysterious, top-secret school in the jungle. On a "pleasure" trip to Rwanda to see mountain gorillas, accompanied by a morose American teenager, James is caught in gorilla-poaching crossfire and faces the sort of impossible questions Africa so frequently poses--whose life is more valuable, that of an African child or a baby gorilla? In Beira, a coastal city in Mozambique, she and her friend David are given one day to search for David's missing mother and sister while the Russians pull out, guerrilla fighters approach, and a mass demonstration circles the wreckage. And in the final dramatic story, James just barely survives renegade Turkana warriors, 120-degree heat, starvation, crocodiles, broken ribs, and a head injury in the search for the lost Dr. Kali, an English-educated Turkana witchdoctor. James is truly an audacious explorer--skilled not only in a number of languages but also in living with almost nothing and in the most hostile of environments. She is also tough on her clients. However, just when you think you're reading nothing more than a very good mystery, complete with colorful international characters and whodunit conundrums, accompanied by a woman long on smarts and balls but short on compassion, she thrusts you squarely into the heart of Africa, where it is impossible not to feel deeply. These are haunting stories written by a remarkable woman who knows not only how to live a life of risk, but how to tell a terrific story. --Lesley Reed

From Publishers Weekly

"I investigate safari, ship and plane accidents as well as murders and thefts and I search for missing persons," explains international private investigator James. In this ambitious but somewhat uneven debut, she combines mystery, literary memoir and adventure tale, achieving elements of all but mastering none. With a colorful cast of characters, from Kumlesh the "alchemist" and Hitesh the guru to Ensign Basso, "hero" and sometime lover, and Captain Daniel MacKinnon, skipper of the boat that shuttles James on some of her journeys, the stories have some truly fine moments of high adventure and peril. Sometimes stiff, her prose occasionally glitters with vivid descriptions and a hint of magic realism. Readers accompany James on an unauthorized mountain gorilla trek in Rwanda as chaperone to an extremely annoying young man, and travel to Nairobi to investigate the alleged suicide of a plantation owner; to war-torn Beira, Mozambique, in search of the almost certainly dead sister and mother of a friend; and to "hell on earth," Turkanaland in northern Kenya, to find a missing witchdoctor, in the seemingly endless title story. Though the stories are intriguing, the wry and world-weary voice of the narrator often impedes the overall enjoyment of her tales. But the book takes readers places that many of them will never go and paints an intimate portrait of the diverse and fascinating cultures coexisting on the African continent. As such, it can be treated as a kind of safari: parts of the journey may be difficult, but in the end, they are worth the ride.

Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.


Product Details

  • Hardcover: 235 pages
  • Publisher: William Morrow & Company; 1st edition (August 2001)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0060186275
  • ISBN-13: 978-0060186272
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6.3 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (32 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,241,480 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

32 Reviews
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 (26)
4 star:
 (1)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:
 (4)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.4 out of 5 stars (32 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

24 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Inspirational Adventures out of Africa, October 25, 2001
By 
Eric Swenson (Seattle, WA USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Dancing with the Witchdoctor (Hardcover)
Dancing with the Witchdoctor is a marvelous book, all the more remarkable because it is Kelly James' first one. This account of some of her experiences as a private investigator in Africa reads like a well-crafted novel, a page turner at that. But as she says in the preface, these tales are not about her. James' aim is to tell the stories of women she met and the extraordinary ways they prevailed against the challenges of ordinary life in Africa in these troubled times. She succeeds with gusto.

James calls them "heroines," and does them proud. Among others, she introduces us to the Watusi women of Rwanda, to Moana of Mozambique, and to Lua, a Turkana woman who saves Kelly's life. The qualities James admires in these people come through in the text: courage, compassion, commitment. I found inspiration here.

The land, the elements themselves, have presence in Dancing with the Witchdoctor, notably the unceasing winds of Lake Turkana and the rainforest home of the mountain gorillas. The book smacks of Africa. The beat of life that drew James to that continent resounds in these pages.

This book defies categorization. One Seattle book store originally put it under travel, until an employee who had read it, said "no way." Another has it under World History for some reason. Call it an adventure story (which it is), and people think fiction. Say it's a memoir, and watch people yawn. It's by a woman about women, but it's not a "woman's book," or if it is, you certainly don't have to be a female to treasure it.

One category this book certainly fits: Damn Good Read!

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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Truth more fascinating than fiction, March 20, 2004
Private investigator Kelly Clark has an adventurous spirit. That spirit leads her to take investigative contracts on the forgotten continent of Africa. She stares death in the face and somehow lives to write about it.

That synposis sounds like a page-turning novel, but this book is much better because it is true. Kelly James is a red-headed American who fell in love with adventure when she as a youngster and tells of her African experience in four stirring vignettes. She is a modern renaissance woman. A master of African culture, regional history and the human condition. She also writes incredibly well.

This book is not for the weak or soft any more than Indiana Jones would appeal to those of high sensitivities. James' Africa is harsh and real. As the sun beats down, mankind also often does the same to its fellow earthly inhabitants. But the lessons James teaches are invaluable. Her love for Africa and its people is indisputable. James teaches us lessons poignantly and with page-turning adventure. Western arrogance can be very dangerous.

A must-read, I recommend this book to all readers who don't need life candy-coated. A winner!

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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Not one boring sentence and the action never stops. Great!, March 19, 2004
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I love true stories about adventures in faraway places. And this fine book certainly meets that test. Kelly James gives us a short introductory chapter in which she describes her upbringing on a ranch in the American northwest. She was raised to ride and shoot and live with adventure. Soon, she realized she didn't want to be relegated to a typical female role in life. And so she became a private investigator and has traveled all over the world in a wide variety of international business investigations. Mostly, she works in Africa and the book is comprised of four separate stories about a few unique assignments.

Her writing style is fast-paced, breezy and has the sense of adventure that obviously drives her life. There's not one boring sentence in the whole book and the action never stops. I read these stories with the kind of attention that kept me breathless and turning the pages as something new happens on every page. And my sense of wonder at her bravery and willingness to take risks never ceased. I just couldn't stop reading and was sorry when this 235-page book ended.

In the first story she investigates a mysterious death of a wealthy plantation owner. In the second story she travels into the depths of gorilla country. In the third story she helps a young man visit his war-torn land. And, in the last story, she is hired to investigate a young female African doctor's disappearance. Often, she fines herself in personal danger and has is forced to survive in a very hostile environment. Each one of these stories kept my eyes glued to the page. I couldn't put the book down until they were finished.

"Dancing With the Witchdoctor" was a mini-adventure for me. It brought me to places I've only dreamed of visiting and made me identify with the author's courage, stamina and sense of adventure. For me, reading this book was like being picked up by a whirlwind and experiencing the trip of my life. I loved it!

Highly recommended.

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The women in this book are real; their stories are true. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
wounded tracker, banana beer, baby gorilla, entire encampment, coffee farm, red comb, blue bag
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Freda Wagner, Ensign Basso, Captain Mac, San Francisco, Sir Richard, Frau Wagner, Lake Turkana, Ferguson's Gulf, Gil Birla, Dee Dee, East Africa, New York, Dian Fossey, Labios Rubi, Frances Von Heilm, Indian Hill, Proud Mary, South Africa, Charles Childress, Coffee Kenya Corporation, Jesus Christ, Jomo Kenyatta, Navigator Duncan, Pwani Hotel, Victoria the Determined
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