"The forest up there was wonderful and magical: enormous strangler figs, vines, moss, lichens, orchids, ferns, and wild jasmine adorned it. It was strange how it really gave everyone the impression of an enchanted forest! The golden light of the afternoon sun filtered through the dense branches. We spotted a turaco with blue and crimson red feathers suddenly flying from one tree to another, like a flash of fire; we stopped, our hearts pounding, hearing the beat of its wings above us."
(A Stroll in Paradise)Antonella Belpietro's lyrical account of life among the Maasai in southern Kenya is Italy's answer to Karen Blixen. Read it and be bewitched.”
Thirty-five years after “I Dreamed of Africa” by Kuki Gallmann,
another extraordinary, moving and even more unforgettable story of real life emerges
from the savannahs of Kenya.
Antonella Bonomi’s is a personal, almost intimate diary, written primarily for herself
and her family, a collection of true adventures, including those of the soul and the
heart, that unite the Africa of yesterday to that of today.
“Canto D’Africa” is not a reportage of the continent’s miseries, nor is it the
artificial exotic dream of an easily impressionable tourist in search of escapism. It is
a one-off, impossible to duplicate, true journey of a woman whose life (and the ambitious
project of a husband who is pioneer of nature conservation) takes from a bourgeois and
urban life to the uncontaminated wilderness of Africa among the maasai warriors.
Here, at the foot of Kilimanjaro, little by little she discovers a vocation, for herself
and for her family, that goes beyond the postcard image of her company’s luxury safaris
and becomes a brave human adventure that, before the last page is reached, each of us
would have dreamed to experience.”
Africa's is an infinite song sung by millions of voices, human and animal, that has always sought its harmony and often, extraordinarily, manages to find it. Antonella Bonomi, unlike Karen Blixen who was the first to transcribe the score, does not ask herself if Africa "knows its song", because she herself has become part of those melodies. Narrating what is a "choice of love", with a captivating style between autobiography and novel, pages recovered from a diary saved from the fires and from the surprises of life in Kenya alternate with frescoes of wild Nature, respect and deep gratitude for a Land that "can give a lot, but can take away just as much, suddenly and without a reason". "Canto D'Africa" does not celebrate the entrepreneur who with her husband Luca Belpietro created and manages Campi Ya Kanzi, one of the most magical, sustainable and renowned realities for safaris in the savannah, but celebrates the deep gratitude to the African continent and its life lessons. From the Chyulu Hills, which are not only the “green hills of Africa” at the foot of Kilimanjaro described by Ernest Hemingway, we travel through the wonder and variety of landscapes and situations of Kenya and Tanzania, from the nature reserves of Maasai Mara and Samburu, to the lunar Lake Turkana, from modern Nairobi with its contrasts and colonial reminiscences to the remote dream island of Kiwayu, from the majestic crater of Ngorongoro to the quiet of Malindi, where the best friends of the houses are the gardens. The journey of a passionate and courageous woman, of a proud and present wife and mother, a life story that, also thanks to the wonderful setting in which it is set and the author's ability to narrate it, enriches us and does us good. Singing about that Africa that teaches "every day a little to live, and a little to die.”