A book jacket filled with accolades that aren't well deserved. Not to say that this isn't an informative read; it is, very much so. It also has a mostly light, newsy feel to it that is essential as an awful lot is thrown at you.
In the end, however, this is more a research summary of Angola than it is an insightful look at Angola today. Hmmm. That's not exactly fair or even correct. Metcalf sums up modern day Angola well - centralized power, a rogue oil industry, an enormous gap between the haves and the have nots - and no easy or apparent way out.
But the meat of the book is found in the summaries of research he conducted on the history - near and longer term - of Angola than in any insightful look at the people or customs of those living in Angola today. To be sure, he meets people with opinions and experiences but, to me, they seemed like window dressing - and 80% of them were expatriates, interesting expatriates but foreigners looking in, nonetheless.
One may say, that it is JUST a journey into Angola, so what can you expect. True. But that still leaves one wanting to better understand what Angolan's think, how they cope, what future they see...and the book was weak here. And weak enough to be palpable. There are better books that describe travel and better books that dig deeper. I think of the book I just finished, A Town on the River, about a two year stay in Fuling, China. The book is so rich in insight into the state of the writer AND the feeling and understanding of place. Better thinker. Better writer.
Still, want to learn a lot about where Angola has come from? Metcalfe has done his homework. You'll learn a lot and you won't not enjoy the read.