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Jacana, 2018. Hardcover with dustcover, 230 pages.
Very neat condition; as new.
Francois Levaillant was the first and greatest South African birder, the first major figure of modern ornithology, the creator of the first safari, the first anthropologist of the Cape and our first investigative reporter criticising colonial brutality. He predicted the rebellion of the frontier Boers and was the first to portray the dilemmas of coloured identity. His work in creating beautifully illustrated bird books of his time inspired a map for King Louis XVI that has become the most valuable African map ever produced. His Travels into the Interior of Africa was a best seller across Europe and the most widely translated text on South Africa until Nelson Mandelas autobiography two centuries later. This book tells how, for a quarter of a century, a South African researcher searched for Levaillants travel notebooks and the fate of his collection and tried to solve the puzzles and mysteries of Levaillants life and times. Glens search took him from the banks of the Orange River to the vaults of the Paris Museum where no Dan Brown hero ever went, facing 30 000 dead birds alone in search of Levaillants legacy; from tracing Levaillants travels to Theefontein and Pampoenkraal and Kokskraal to the Bloubok exhibit in the hall of extinct animals in Pariss Natural History Museum; from encounters with billionaires to interactions with French archivists. Glenns experiences show that research means searching. This book is intended for would-be researchers, for people wondering why writers as various as Nicolas Chamfort, Karel Schoeman, JM Coetzee and Michel Leiris admired Levaillant, for teachers looking for a new start for South African literature and for people interested in the bush or birding who want to know why Levaillant was our greatest naturalist.