Nairobi’s streets are fizzing with violence – and I’m glad to be home
When I visit Europe I feel I am in a place facing decline, aging and cultural confusion
When I visit Europe I feel I am in a place facing decline, aging and cultural confusion
Black cotton is a special kind of soil you find in Africa, which when it’s dry looks like the cracked, dark-gray hide of a rhino
I nearly exploded in my vehicle while trying to find a parking space
Kenya When I was a child in Kenya, the road from the Indian Ocean up to Nairobi was still a dirt track, with the way frequently blocked by a rhino or large herds of elephant. A few decades later, the route has two railways and the road is an unbroken column of lorries heading all the way to the Congo. Africa is growing so fast that older people like me feel a kind of existential jetlag — or a sort of phantom limb syndrome, in which our eyes still see empty wilderness, plains and forests of a recent past that have vanished under the concrete of the present day.