African Odyssey
The adventurous journeys of a Peace Corps volunteer in Africa
by
Book Details
About the Book
How does a little-traveled idealistic New Yorker adjust to the life of a Peace Corps volunteer in Africa, teaching biology in a culture infused with superstition? In this memoir, a former Peace Corps volunteer recounts the challenges and frustrations of teaching secondary school science in Nigeria from 1964-66, just prior to the tragic Biafran War. Author Sandford describes memorable, often humorous, experiences living and working in Nigeria and traveling throughout the country, including unusual dining experiences, an embarrassing church visit, his first haircut by an African barber, and an encounter with a traditional Yoruba healer or juju man. He also relates traveling to National Parks and interesting locales in Ethiopia, Kenya, Tanzania, and Uganda, in East Africa, and his adventures there, including meeting Jomo Kenyatta in Mombasa, the Hyena Man in Harar, and surviving an elephant stampede in Murchison Falls NP.
African Odyssey is a readable and entertaining account of one American's immersion in a different culture, and of the rewards that come when a person confronts new challenges and uniquely different situations, assuming the risks of journeying to places much different from those to which one is accustomed.
About the Author
Born in 1940 on Long Island, Floyd Sandford attended St. Lawrence University, Southern Illinois University, and Michigan State before receiving a doctorate in Zoology from the University of Oklahoma. Retired from college teaching, he travels, joins Earthwatch expeditions, plants trees, and hikes long distances. He lives in Cedar Rapids, Iowa.