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320 pages, Kindle Edition
First published January 1, 2012
When the crew buy fish from a passing canoe, Yvette stands over Bwalile telling him how to grill it, then offers the finished product to me before flaking a little on a plate for the crew and promptly finishing off the rest herself. (123)(Honesty begs me to note Rawlence’s benefit of the disconnection.)
That evening two UN workers invite me to dinner in their compound. Without a nod to Uvira’s hungry inhabitants, we feast on Italian food, French wine, Canadian whisky and cigars, but still no fish. (76)
The stars come out; the sky is taut and clear, the skin of a drum. (147)That green man understands me. If he wrote a book about going camping under the stars, and it was just his descriptions of the sky, I’d snatch that up. I’d preorder the hardcover.
…under stars so vivid they form a mist across the night…. (163)
[T]he stars glint sharply — a fistful of diamonds scattered on velvet. (249)
The ground is muddy underfoot and although I must watch my steps, I look up. The rain has drained from the sky and stars shimmer across the black vastness of the night. (286)