David Byrd
asked
Tim Butcher:
Quick questions after just finishing "Blood River": how did you leave Boma? Were you able to get air service out of there? Did you have your transport from there planned well in advance?
Tim Butcher
I got back to Kinshasa by car and flew out from there. The airport in Kinshasa is the biggest in the country and back in 2004 South African Airways had scheduled flights out. Getting from Boma back to Kinshasa was easier said than done. I shared in the book my low opinion of the `guide' who escorted me to Boma, asking for money at every turn and generally playing up to the worst stereotype of African scam artist. The vehicle he had procured broke down in a number of ways on the route back. The brakes locked. Then they unlocked but did not work. The driver tried to cannibalise some meaningful brake disc material by pinching a disc from another car and then snapping off its edges until it `fit' onto our wheel. Then the battery went. We ended up having to overnight in a small hotel along with 4,000 of the noisiest, hungriest mosquitoes I have ever encountered. And all the time there were checkpoints where a foreigner was expected to produce an Ordre de Mission (purpose of visit) document signed by the internal security agency of DRC. It was not a journey I look back on with fondness.
More Answered Questions
Brad Patton
asked
Tim Butcher:
Good morning! ? Blood River was an excellent well researched enjoyable book. Having lived in the Congo am a pretty good judge of what is accurate plus you write well --perhaps years working for the Telegraph polished a very readable style. There is a great passage where you are approaching Stanleyville and observe that if the local unreported mass horrors had happened in any other country--they would be etched ?
Tatum
asked
Tim Butcher:
These questions only give us so many characters, so I apologize for another question! I am an International Development student and my dream is to be a humanitarian journalist/photojournalist. I specifically love East Africa. I am wondering if you have any career advice for someone aspiring to do something similar to you? How did you start out in travel writing?
Alan Parker
asked
Tim Butcher:
Tim, I just finished "Blood River". To discover how things are now, I checked Kisangani in Wikipedia. To my surprise, it has changed a lot: "The city is a centre for television, radio, theatre and film. The waterfront and nightlife attract residents and tourists alike." Either the situation has changed profoundly, or someone is putting a brave face on the situation (to be polite). The question is which?
About Goodreads Q&A
Ask and answer questions about books!
You can pose questions to the Goodreads community with Reader Q&A, or ask your favorite author a question with Ask the Author.
See Featured Authors Answering Questions
Learn more