
audiobook
by Henry M. (Henry Morton) Stanley
In the waning years of the nineteenth century a mysterious silence fell over the African continent when the famed explorer David Livingstone vanished after a last dispatch from the remote town of Oedzjidzji. The British government, uneasy and unwilling to fund a rescue, left the task to a bold American journalist, Henry Stanley, whose reputation for tenacity had already made headlines. Charged with a simple yet monumental directive—to locate Livingstone and report his fate—Stanley’s mission quickly became a race against rumors, hostile terrain, and the ticking clock of public expectation.
The story follows Stanley’s frantic departure from Paris, where a terse telegram thrust him into a whirlwind of preparation. He gathers a modest fund, charts a course through the newly opened Suez Canal, and readies for a grueling trek up the Nile toward the heart of Africa. Along the way he records the peoples, landscapes, and perils he encounters, turning a rescue operation into a vivid chronicle of an era when the unknown still beckoned the adventurous.
Full title
Stanley's tocht ter opsporing van Livingstone De Aarde en haar Volken, 1873
Language
nl
Duration
~2 hours (141K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Jeroen Hellingman and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net/
Release date
2006-01-16
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1841–1904
Known for finding David Livingstone in central Africa and for dramatic best-selling travel books, this Welsh-born journalist became one of the most famous and controversial explorers of the 19th century. His life story moves from poverty and reinvention to headline-making expeditions that shaped how many readers imagined Africa.
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