Henry Morton Stanley is one of the most celebrated and controversial
figures in the story of the 19th century 'scramble for Africa'.
Originally a journalist working for US newspapers, this book is from an
early stage of Stanley's career, recounting not his own expeditions, but
those of two other heroes of British Imperial history, Sir Garnet
Wolseley and Lord Napier, which Stanley accompanied as a war
correpondent. in, respectively, east and west Africa. The two campaigns
were similar in being Imperial punitive expeditions, albeit carried out
in very different terrain. The campaign in Abyssinia ( today's Ethiopia)
was conducted against the mentally unbalanced Emperor Theodore, who was
holding foreign hostages in his mountain stronghold, Magdala. The
seemingly impregnable fortress was stormed and taken; Theodore committed
suicide and the hostages were freed. The Comassie campaign was carried
out in the sweltering jungles of the Ashanti tribe in today's Ghana and
Sierra Leone. Led by Wolseley, the expedition battled disease and
natural disasters, as well as the Ashanti, before Comassie too was taken
and razed to the ground. A fascinating account by a great journalist and
explorer of two classic imperial campaigns.