From Booklist
East Africa may be one of the most photographed areas on the planet, but a good photographer can always find something new to show us. A male lion licking water from a sodden cub, a giraffe in midgallop as she negotiates a turn, and a stretching gray-headed kingfisher are all images that stick in the mind after perusing this book. Photographer Krasemann has an immediacy about his pictures that is appealing, both intimate (a sleeping colobus monkey) and artistic (a vulture backlit by a rain-cloud-filled sky). Bach's text is written in the form of journal entries, bringing the reader along with her on safari. She writes of rain on her tent's roof, hair so dusty, so exposed to the sun that it feels like straw, and watching predators stalk and consume their prey. Calling an African safari "sensory overload," the two authors provide the same overload to the reader. Although nothing can compare with experiencing Africa for yourself, this book is recommended because it comes very close to actually being there.
Nancy Bent
Product Description
Africa is one of those dream destinations at the top of every one's list. And once you have visited Africa, pieces of that very personal experience always remain, just at the edge of your thoughts. As a visitor to this untamed continent you become deeply affected by the travel, the creatures, the food, the sun and the wind. Within these pages you will find outstanding photography by one of the world's most noted photographers, Stephen J. Krasemann.