"Incorporating contemporary conflict and historical tradition in Mozambique, this travel memoir chronicles the experiences of a team of South African journalists who journeyed up the tropical coast of Southeast Africa and across the interior land of Mozambique in the early 1990s. The travelers observe architecture and devil worship, nature and war, snorkeling and cooking, and encounter aid workers, backpackers, bandits, prostitutes, and ordinary Mozambique citizens along the way. With humor and sharp observation, this account captures a pivotal moment in Mozambique's history after the bitter independence struggle and devastating civil war when the country, its people, and the narrator must redefine individual and national identities."
Fox is a novelist, travel writer and photographer based in Cape Town, South Africa, and is the former editor of Getaway travel magazine. He was a Rhodes Scholar and received a doctorate in English literature from Oxford University after which he was a research fellow at the University of Cape Town, where he taught part time for 20 years. His articles and photographs have appeared internationally in a number of publications and on a wide range of topics, while his short stories and poems have appeared in numerous anthologies. He has written scripts and directed award-winning documentaries and is a two-time Mondi journalism award winner (1999 and 2004). Recent books include The Marginal Safari (Umuzi), The Impossible Five (Tafelberg), Beat Routes (Karavan), Place (Umuzi) and, most recently, a World War II series of novels, starting with The Cape Raider (Penguin and Sapere) and The Wolf Hunt (Sapere). Justin was longlisted for the 2011 Alan Paton Award for non-fiction, the 2012 Olive Schreiner Prize for Literature, and his debut novel, Whoever Fears the Sea (Umuzi 2014), was longlisted for the Etisalat Prize for African literature.
Justin Fox says of the journey: "It had taught me to see differently ... plunged me into depression, and made me soar. It had done everything a journey should do. It was tough and great " [ p. 206]
If you want to find out about modern Mozambique, read this account by travel journo, Justin Fox. You will also learn quite a bit about the country's colonial history, and find out about this exotic East African coast of the Indian Ocean. I enjoyed the book, and remembered my own childhood holidays in Beira in the 1950s, but those idyllic days and towns now long gone, after a long and terrible civil war. If you have a 4x4 and plenty of malaria tablets, you can go to Mozambique on holiday. Bon voyage!
Fox is a photographer, not a writer and that fact is easy to spot. Although the latter part of the book is more entertaining and better written than the first half, the book is mostly interesting for being a travelogue which is set in relatively unchartered territory: Mozambique. Fox spends too much time on the mundane. Only in the last part of the book, where he starts relating his experiences on the road with his personal view on life does the book start to get interesting.