In the summer of 1958, jazz and blues historian Samuel Charters traveled
with Ann Danberg to Andros, a remote island on the wrong side of the
wind in the Bahamas. Living within a small local community descended
from a handful of Bahamian slaves, they discovered how the unique
historical fusion of disparate cultures on Andros, from Africa and
Europe, had resulted in a wealth of traditional music that had
stubbornly resisted the influx of modern styles. Combining rare travel
and musical elements with Danberg's evocative photographs, Char-ters
describes their search for a song so rich and startling in its
resonance, they had to follow it to its source. Just about the best
'what-I-did-on-my-summer-vacation' report ever written. --Booklist
(starred review)