Redmonds Dschungelbuch
- 390 Seiten
- 14 Lesestunden
Redmond O'Hanlon ist ein britischer Autor, der für seine abenteuerlichen Reisen in die entlegensten Winkel der Welt bekannt ist. Seine Schriften tauchen tief in die rohe Realität der Wildnis ein und fangen die einzigartigen Herausforderungen und Wunder dieser Expeditionen ein. O'Hanlons Berichte von Dschungelexpeditionen auf Borneo, im Amazonasbecken und im Kongo sowie seine lebendige Erzählung einer Reise auf einem Fischkutter im Nordatlantik bieten den Lesern ein immersives Erlebnis.






Roman aus dem Englischen von Chris Hirte, umfasst 656 Seiten.
O'Hanlon takes readers on a four-month journey up the Orinoco River and across the Amazon basin in search of the Yanomami Indians. His book contains humor, adventure, and a wealth of information. One map.
Travels upriver into the heart of the Jungle.Redmond O'Hanlon's classic 'Into the Heart of Borneo', from which this extract is taken, was described by Eric Newby as 'not only among the top three post-war books of it's kind but certainly the funniest travel book I have ever read'.
Features an adventurous travel to Congo, one of the most dangerous and inhospitable jungle in the world.
'We've left a lot of men in Borneo - know what I mean?' With their SAS trainer's warnings ringing in their ears, the naturalist, Redmond O'Hanlon, and the poet, James Fenton, set out to rediscover the lost rhinoceros of Borneo. They were loaded with enough back-breaking kit to survive two months in a steaming 95degree jungle.
When Redmond O'Hanlon set out to rediscover the lost rhinoceros of Borneo, accompanied by the poet James Fenton, it was in the best tradition of nineteenth-century exploration. They were armed with backbreaking kit suitable to surviving two months in a steaming jungle of creeping, crawling and biting things; their heads brimmed with training provided by the SAS; and O'Hanlon himself had an encyclopedic knowledge of the region's flora and fauna. And yet they proceeded to have an adventure that neither O'Hanlon, his poet friend nor his guides were quite prepared for.
Having survived Borneo, Amazonia, and the Congo, the indefatigable Redmond O’Hanlon sets off on his next his own perfect storm, in the wild waters off the northern tip of Scotland. Equipped with a fancy Nikon, an excessive supply of socks, and no seamanship whatsoever, O’Hanlon joins the commercial fishing crew of the Norlantean , a deep-sea trawler, to stock a bottomless hull with their catch, even as a hurricane roars around them. Rich in oceanography, marine biology, and uproarious humor, Trawle r is Redmond O’Hanlon at his finest.