The new fourth edition of Bradt’s Angola remains the only dedicated, full-length English-language guide to this increasingly popular and now readily accessible southern African nation, which offers a heady combination of wildlife-rich rainforests, world-class surfing and beaches, remote deserts and richly diverse human culture – all in a country from which the ancestors of 12 million Americans hail (a legacy of the transatlantic slave trade). Luanda is a capital of contrasts, offering everything from colonial Portuguese ruins to $100-a-plate sushi bars, a vibrant carnival to sophisticated nightclubs, and landscaped waterfronts to grand public buildings. Venture beyond the urban bustle, perhaps on the recently rehabilitated Benguela railway, and you can discover attractions ranging from frontier diamond towns to relaxed beach resorts, excellent sea-fishing to enthralling surfing. The country’s Atlantic coast stretches through landscapes as varied as tropical rainforest in the north and desert in the south, and includes over 1,000 km of unspoilt sands. In eight ever-improving national parks, large mammals lost to poaching are being reintroduced. African Parks-run Iona is the jewel in the crown, while Luando remains one of the only places left to spot the critically endangered giant sable antelope, Angola’s national symbol. Elsewhere, visitors can discover Africa’s third-highest waterfall, numerous highly regarded birding spots and a rich human culture that binds together 40 ethnic identities. Unmissable attractions include the 20,000-year-old rock paintings at Tchitundo-Hulo, and M’banza Congo, a UNESCO World Heritage Site that was the centre of power for the Kilukeni dynasty, who founded the stone city a century before the Portuguese colonisers arrived Across 19 chapters, Bradt’s Angola offers full practical and background information, and incisive coverage of the whole country. This fourth edition has been thoroughly updated to reflect Angola’s rapid rate of change, notably the reinvigoration of the tourist industry – including through a new international airport, lower flight costs, high-quality roads and now-straightforward visa processes – as integral to Angola’s plan for sustainable economic development. Bradt’s Angola is ideal for everyone keen to unveil the secrets of this vast, intriguing country – from surfers visiting independently to birdwatchers on organised tours, adventurous travellers to fishing enthusiasts.
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Originally from the UK and Italy, Oscar Scafidi (youtube.com/c/ScafidiTravels) has lived, worked and travelled in more than thirty African countries – including spending five years as a history teacher in Angola, during which time he thoroughly explored all 18 of the country’s provinces. A travel writer, political risk consultant and international educator, Scafidi has authored Bradt’s guidebooks to Tunisia, Angola and Equatorial Guinea; his wider travel journalism focuses on intriguing and often difficult destinations such as Somalia, Afghanistan, Liberia and Timor Leste. Scafidi has also written a travel narrative, Kayak the Kwanza, about his Guinness World Record-setting source-to-sea navigation of Angola’s longest river, the Kwanza, a 32-day journey of over 1,300km: a documentary film can be viewed at kayakthekwanza.com.
The Bradt Guide to Angola is by far the best book for the independent traveller
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