£3.99
Gule Wamkulu - the Big Dance
On the eve of AIDS, Zimbabwe battles for Independence
An American expatriate remembers her home, garden and hope-filled Zambians in Zambia when, taking up Zimbabwe's battle, bombs fall, murders happen, food shortages bring starvation. Her bipolar American anthropologist husband goes near berserk.
Bombs kill the innocent, vicious murders go unexplained; starvation and death threaten when food, medical supplies—equipment and vital machinery are disallowed entry into Zambia's land-locked land.
Gifted and bipolar, the anthropologist, searching every specter of political innuendo, ends in his undoing. The writer, deeply interested in the land and its people, experiences Zambian kindness, warmth, procrastination, suspicion, and joy.
This singular, independent intrigue with Zambia as well as the dynamics of their love, provide memoirs landscape.
The young American University librarian, responsible for the couple's residency in Zambia, yields wrenching complications.
The marriage suffers collapse.
AIDS creeps into the landscape.