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Okavango Gods
 
 
•  Title: Okavango Gods
•  Author: Anthony Fleischer

•  Paperback: 210 pages

•  Publisher: Authors Choice Press (May, 2001)
•  Language: English
•  ISBN: 059518541X
 
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Editorial Reviews

Pula is the son of the rainmaker and he fishes with his father from a mokoro on the Okavango River. Above him he sees aircraft rising into the clouds and he too wants to fly. He and his dear friend Julia are caught in the biggest flood ever to hit

the Okavango Delta. They are rescued from Shakawe by an American pilot flying a "C130 Hercules." A huge wave of global change now swamps the world, old cultures and long-honoured beliefs are questioned, small languages and small communities are being destroyed, some people are endangered - not only birds and beasts. The cycles of flood and drought have been around since Gilgamesh's time, so have unstable metaphysical explanations for them, the eternal role of fickle gods. Even Okavango Gods. Current change in the Okavango Delta and ancient change in the Euphrates are perhaps not so far apart after all. Man will bring about the change, the ancient gods are no longer reliable, the future lies in man's volition. "Fleischer has a keen sense of structure and counterpoint." "He weaves the past and the present, the primitive and the current, history and fiction into a fascinating text."
From a review of OKAVANGO GODS by Barrie Hough, RAPPORT, Johannesburg.
Book Review 2

The Okavango River Delta in Botswana is about as deep into Africa as one can go. The great river empties, not into the sea, but into the Kalahari Desert, which absorbs it like a sponge. Anthony Fleischer puts you there with exciting and poetic imagery you will not forget, and you, too, will be totally absorbed. He creates authentic characters of this wondrous place, and through their senses we experience its marvelous landscape and animal inhabitants. The native Hambukushu people are portrayed through the young man Pula and his father. We are with them while they struggle to survive a mighty flood and overcome human enemies, and we learn their lore and magic.

Pula's friend is Julia, the daughter of a Portuguese doctor (the Portuguese having a presence from semi-colonial days). Their unspoken love powerfully attracts while their separate cultures divide them; we learn much about these cultures as their very personal story unfolds. Add a few outsiders, demonic or heroic, Bubi the local witch, and even a swarm of locusts. All are both tangible and symbolic. In this darkly mysterious setting, Fleischer weaves together the most personal themes and the grandest legends on the thread of a gripping adventure. In his compact novel, he at once lights up Africa for us, while respectfully leaving it impenetrably mysterious, as it must ever be. This is a wonderful and edifying story by a master of our language.

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