Related Vacation Book Subjects: VacationBookReview thailand tonga
More Pages: togo Page 1 2
Books to read if you're planning a vacation in "togo", sorted by average review score:

The Village of Waiting
Published in Paperback by Farrar Straus & Giroux (August, 2001)
Authors: George Packer and Philip Gourevitch
Average review score:

Incredible
Haunting--this book is raw and hontest. I can't get it off my mind. Will be visiting friends doing VSO in northern Ghana soon and am trying to get a copy for them as well.

Togo: still crazy after all these years
I read a tattered, much passed around copy of Village of Waiting in my Peace Corps house in a village not far from George Packer's. I just returned in October 2001. Hard to imagine that after nearly twenty years, so much of what Packer wrote about Togo has not changed very much. . . Togo still waits. When people ask me about Togo, I'm still not sure what to say. I imagine Packer is still unsure. All I can say is that it is easy to give up on Togo, quite another thing to give up on its people. Packer's reflections of life in Lavie provide a lot of insight into the life of a Peace Corps Volunteer. This is a book that many PCVs either love or hate. Although it must be said that they seem to hate it when they arrive in Togo, and love it if they read or re-read it later, especially after leaving Togo. Many PCVs have complained that he was too soft, and couldn't handle it, but it is my impression that Packer really understood his reality and that is what made it so hard for him to handle it everyday. He understood the absurdity and hardship, and did not romanticize it. It made him angry. I know how he felt. I often wondered about the characters in Packer's book, as I zoomed through Lavie on my way up-country. Luckily, this new print has some follow-up on the many characters of his village.

A moving, intelligent and insightful masterpiece
For the longest time after reading this amazing and wonderful book I worried about George Packer - how he had gotten on, if he was successful, where he had gone, and if he had written more in the same lucid and painfully honest style he used in this autobiographical essay on his years in Togo as a Peace Corps volunteer. So it was with special joy today that I discovered not only that he's just written a major work (on American liberalism) that has been reviewed by the NY Times quite favorably, but that's he's written other works as well. Truly, Packer has an intellectual honesty that is extremely rare, coupled with an innate ability to put in words the deepest and most sincere and heartfelt feelings of Peace Corps volunteer and of those who have share the volunteer experience, particularly those among us who were blessed with service in Africa. The Village of Waiting is a "travel narrative", you might call it, that transcends the genre. Highly recommended.


An African in Greenland
Published in Hardcover by Harcourt (June, 1983)
Author: Tete-Michel Kpomassie
Average review score:

wow!
Kpomassie refreshingly reveals without a trace of romanticisme the widly different world of the Inuits. From espisodes of intense companionship to loneliness, exhalation and revultion, our African traveler describes a frigid landscape populated with a very colorful culture and personalities. Extreemly engaging Tbetbe-Michel Kpomassie's courageous personality charms us and the world he describes.

An African in Greenland
Excellent book about how a person can be self sufficient in achieving their wildest dreams. A word of caution, this book is not for the squeamish. Some of the scenes described in the book may offend a reader not familiar with the customs of the Far North. However, I thought that the book gave me an excellent fresh look at how people live around the world.

The fascinating story of a true 20th century adventure
Modern times mean modern means. Our contemporary adventurers always tote an amazing array of technology with them, or they rely on the backup of millions of dollars worth of equipment. Heading off to the stars eventually will involve the work of thousands of people. We always knew where the first balloonists around the world were, even their altitude. The Vikings never had that advantage, nor did the explorers of the Amazon nor the Micronesians as they sailed across the vast Pacific. Here is a story of a real, one-man adventure that started in the 1960s. A teenager in Togo, West Africa, Kpomassie grew up in an African village family. After a close encounter with a python, he was destined to become a priest in the traditional religion. His destiny was changed, though, the day he found a book on Greenland in a Christian bookshop. Utterly fascinated, he determined to travel to the far north to live with the Eskimos himself. This volume is the wonderful story of how he did it. It took eight years of effort to work his way across Africa to France, then ultimately, to Denmark from where he embarked on a ship to Greenland. Most of the book tells of how he lived, worked, hunted, found romance, ate and drank with the denizens of the frozen north, all told with an African perspective. "...the way we were stuffing ourselves with food and swapping stories reminded me so much of Africa..." (p.118) If "white man looks at the natives and pities them" is not your bag, then this is the perfect antidote. Kpomassie blends in so well, he thinks of staying there for the rest of his life, even learns to eat raw whale meat that splintered like ice in his mouth. You will never find another book like this. Buy it !


Against All Odds: The Story of the Toyota Motor Corporation and the Family That Created It
Published in Hardcover by St. Martin's Press (November, 1993)
Authors: Yukiyasu Togo and William Wartman
Average review score:

Toyota Production system (TPS)
Excellent book. Highly recommond for any one who would like to know "What is TPS?". As you see in this book one can try to copy a system but to understand and implement the philosophy behind such a system is very very difficult. Once you start reading it you will not put it down till you finish.

I thought the book was a facinating read
I thought the book was as informative as interesting. I learned a lot about Toyota, and management in general. More impressive was the writing I could not put this book down. It was exiting from start to finish.

This book is loaded with the history of Toyota.
This book will open your eyes to the unique story of men and machines in Japan, USA and Europe. There are also accurate accounts of the history of the automotive industry in the early days. You will come to realize a new appreciation for the honor and ethics of the Toyoda family and the companies and systems they founded and developed.


Togo
Published in Hardcover by Philomel Books (October, 2002)
Author: Robert J. Blake
Average review score:

Togo
Togo is a great book for children to learn about courage and determination. A must for dog lovers! I highly recommend this book for any child.


Togo (Enchantment of Africa)
Published in Paperback by Books on Demand (January, 1977)
Authors: Allan Carpenter and Jim Fortman
Average review score:

Togo Was Amazing
I seriously thought that if you were doing a report, then it would be helpful. Other than that, it is interesting. This book really shows the good side of Togo, while not leaving out a scrap of the bad. If i would have to rate this book, it would be 6 because of how well written it was.


The Ends of the Earth: From Togo to Turkmenistan, from Iran to Cambodia, a Journey to the Frontiers of Anarchy
Published in Paperback by Vintage Books (February, 1997)
Author: Robert Kaplan
Average review score:

now I'm hooked.
I read this on my flight to Turkey, as I experienced my first entry into a truly foreign country. Although I didn't take the risk of travelling outside of the "bubble" that Kaplan talks about, sections of this book definitely pertained to my trip. It altered the way I perceived the world around me. Instead of seeing some Istanbul neighborhoods as helplessly impoverished, I looked for signs of the middle-class ambition that Kaplan spoke of. I also realized that my standards of living are not available to most of the world, and The Ends of the Earth was a good introduction to this concept.

I find particularly interesting the political context in Kaplan's travel writing. Not only do you get the direct visceral experience of travelling through so-called "third world" countries, but you get the political history. My friend said that the book itself is a journey through thought as it is a journey through countries. There is no final answer to why certain cultures develop in one way and others develop in other ways - but you'll certainly appreciate the process as Kaplan visits developing nations across the world and attempts to analyze the past's impact on the present.

This book is highly readable. You simply do not get bored, and I can't think of another non-fiction book that I didn't want to put down at some point.

This book will make you squirm
This book is not your average travel memoir. It is an introspective analysis of the social and political conditions of developing countries from West Africa to Thailand. Typical travelogues can be titillating, but because the authors actually know so little about the cultures that they are visiting for a short time, readers learn more about the authors themselves than about the countries being described. However, this book is quite different in that respect--Kaplan obviously knows this region well, having worked as a journalist in the region for years. As a journalist, he knows which questions to ask and from whom. He describes conversations with high government officials (many of which wish to remain anonymous), as well as tidbits that he picks up from traveling companions and encounters with ordinary people. He backs up all of these personal anecdotes with hard facts and statistics footnoted to hundreds of resources listed in the bibliography. What he has to say can about the countries and cultures that he visits can be quite disturbing.

One of Kaplan's goals for his trip is to try to discover why some regions of the developing world are bordering on anarchy, or have actually slipped over the edge, and others seem to be working well for the community. By observing societies and talking to leaders as well as ordinary people, he attempts to discover what works to build a civil world. He considers the varying influences that tradition, religion, education, government, and environment may have on a society. While he points out that education, particularly literacy, seems to be vital for maintaining civilization, he finds that there are no absolute factors that can predict which societies will succeed and which will devolve into barbarism.

Many of Kaplan's observations are quite disturbing, such as when he points out entire regions where per capita income has fallen dramatically since the 1960s, yet population has risen, in contrast to other regions with similar levels of development in 1960 where exactly the opposite has happened. What's more, Kaplan points out that many of the reasons for these problems are internal to the societies themselves, such as corruption and traditional practices. The people are understandably frustrated, they have little or no education, and they have easy access to powerful weapons. Unscrupulous or ill-educated leaders can easily point the blame for these problems entirely at the 'West', redirecting the anger of the masses so that the society does not implode with its own violence.

Some readers may find some of Kaplan's comments racist or bigoted, but having lived for 4 years in a place where the majority of the population comes from the countries that Kaplan describes, I find that every word rings true for me. Kaplan has put into words my own observations and speculations about what I see around me. The book is filled with hundreds of short remarks that capture so much of my experience here, such as when he quotes an Indian educator as saying 'Only when children are taught to categorize and to analyze, rather than merely to memorize, can they achieve anything in the modern world. Intercommunal and tribal hatreds'arise from too much faulty oral memory and too little self-motivated analysis.' But the one that will stick with me for years is his point that you can't give wealth, and you can't pump it out of the ground. You can only create wealth. This book will be of interest to anyone who is trying to understand the forces behind current world events. It should be read by all top-level policy makers.

A complex, yet highly readable and pertient book
This is not an ordinary "travel book", the author explores the culture, politics, history of parts of the world few westerners know exist. I was particulary interested in his travels through central asia (post soviet union countries) which I knew little about. His themes about population growth, dimishing resources, migrating populations, and their impact on the world were powerful and illuminating. We (in the west) may believe we are immune to the problems of the "third" world, Mr. Kaplan presents a very different picture. I read this book over six months ago and I'm still reflecting on it.


Animal Drawing Anatomy and Action for Artists
Published in Hardcover by Peter Smith Pub (January, 1990)
Author: Charles R. Knight
Average review score:

great for creative kids
My sister and I, when little, spent hours QUIETLY copying the drawings from this book. Mr. Knight's style has affected my own for all of my life. Kids will love the anatomy and beauty of his subjects and drawings.


Confessions of Love
Published in Paperback by University of Hawaii Press (February, 1989)
Authors: Uno Chiyo, Phyllis Birnbaum, and Chiyo Uno
Average review score:

By One Inch
This book was written by a fascinating woman named Uno Chiyo, who was unwilling to accept the life of a simple farm life. On numerous ocasions she left her multiple husbands to either go off with another man or pursue literary interests. This book is supposedly the reflections of one of her many men. An artist who had just recently formed a double suicide pact with the woman he loved. It is said that Uno shared the futon with the man that was blood stained by the man's dead lover. With this premise one would think that this book would be quite interesting, but in my humble opinion i found it to be quite boing in fact. Basically the reader gets the first hand ciew of the artist lusting after the several women he pursues while ignoring his wife and child. One can not really blame him for the cold treatment of his wife because she is quite cold and having amorous meetings on the sidew herself. What the reader gets is basically a description of the man's longing. The book does paint a good picture of bourgeois 30s Japan and the scene at the end is quite good.


Three Military Leaders: Heihachiro Togo, Isoroku Yamamoto, Tomoyuki Yamashita (Kodansha Biographies)
Published in Paperback by Kodansha International (February, 1994)
Author: Edwin Palmer Hoyt
Average review score:

Don't buy this
I have studied the book about admiral Yonai. So what I tell here is only about that. But for me it is enough. If you take his book about Yamamoto: "Yamamoto: the man who planned Pearl Harbor" (New York 1990) you will find that what Yamamoto did in the one book about becoming (vice-)minister of Naval Affairs, in the other Yonai did. Most facts about Yonai in "Tree Military Leaders" are wrong. And a lot about Yamamoto too! That was enough for me to lay down the book and keep it that way.


13 janvier 1963, 13 janvier 1967, pourquoi?
Published in Unknown Binding by Nouvelles Editions africaines du Togo ()
Author: Evalo Wiyao
Average review score:
No reviews found.

Related Vacation Book Subjects: VacationBookReview thailand tonga
More Pages: togo Page 1 2