Selected Product: | West with the Night Paperback Author: Beryl Markham Publisher: North Point Press Release Date: 1982-01-01 ISBN-10: 0865471185 ISBN-13: 9780865471184 List Price: $15.00 Average Customer Rating: | | The Flame Trees of Thika: Memories of an African Childhood (Penguin Twentieth-Century Classics) ISBN-10: 0141183780 ISBN-13: 9780141183787 List Price:$15.00 Out of Africa (Modern Library) ISBN-10: 0679600213 ISBN-13: 9780679600213 List Price:$19.95 Out of Africa and Shadows on the Grass ISBN-10: 0679724753 ISBN-13: 9780679724759 List Price:$14.95 Wind, Sand and Stars ISBN-10: 0151970874 ISBN-13: 9780151970872 List Price:$17.00 Too Close to the Sun: The Audacious Life and Times of Denys Finch Hatton ISBN-10: 1400060699 ISBN-13: 9781400060696 List Price:$27.95 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for West with the Night by Beryl Markham (ISBN-10: 0865471185, ISBN-13: 9780865471184). At this time we have not yet written a review for West with the Night by Beryl Markham (ISBN-10: 0865471185, ISBN-13: 9780865471184). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com
West with the Night is the story of Beryl Markham--aviator, racehorse trainer, beauty--and her life in the Kenya of the 1920s and '30s.
West with the Night | Customer Rating: | I read this book because someone suggested my family might have been related to Beryl Markham, which is not the case, but... What a woman - this is a true account of one of the first bush pilots in Africa, Beryl Markham, who was the first pilot to fly westward across the Atlantic from England. Although there is some dispute whether she actually wrote this autobiographical account (some say that her paramour, who edited the book, actually wrote it - she never confirmed or denied it), the stories are true and fascinating, encouraging the reader to learn more about her. The writing style is wonderful and interesting - no wonder Hemingway loved it. You wouldn't know this book was first published so many years ago. | Reads like fiction | Customer Rating: | | I agree with Hemingway that this is a piece of high literature that reads like fiction and spreads itself before the reader like a well-produced film. It drove me to learn more about the author and her life. | Far far better than I anticipated. Great writing. | Customer Rating: | | Absolutely captivating personal account of times and places long gone. As a fan of "Heat of the Sun," this book was a treasure. | West with the Night | Customer Rating: | As a child growing up with her father in Africa, Beryl Markham faced down lions and wild boar. As an adult she trained race horses before learning to fly airplanes and becoming a bush pilot. Eventually she became the first pilot, female or male, to fly west with the night and cross the Atlantic ocean solo from Europe to North America. Markham brings the African bush to life with stories of boar hunts and elephant hunts. Of horse races and airplane flights over desert terrain. She lived a courageous life in a time when girls were only supposed to wear dresses and play with dolls and flying airplanes was a man's job. Highly inspirational to read!
There's so much to talk about in mother-daughter book clubs or any book club. How was Markham's life different from so many of the girls in her time? How would her life have been different if her mother was also in Africa raising her?
This book is beautifully written; I've read it three times and each reading I glean more and more from it. I highly recommend it for anyone in high school or older. | More than a memoir | Customer Rating: | | Much more than a memoir, Beryl Markham's work is a means of transport, not dissimilar to her beloved plane. It took me back to the Africa I lived in as a young bride, to its stark beauty, its dignified and desparate people, the language of its silences. Her tale of matter-of-fact mercies, and of cruelty equally unremarkable, is the stuff of life, as full of hope as of despair, for its millions of people. Her sensitivity instructs us in things as disparate as a young zebra's personal quirks, or the way the setting sun reflects off a downed plane creating an illusory lake in the dry Serenghettti. We learn of the hunger of a dying man for news from the city, and of the joy of friendship restored, but mostly, we learn of the heart and mind of a brave, independent woman for whom Africa is, eternally, home. |
|