From Publishers Weekly
Born in summer rain in the mountains of Angola, the Okavango River flows into northwestern Botswana, where, after 1000 kilometers, it invades the Kalahari Desert, creating one of the world's great wetlands. Here is a vast and verdant delta of tree-fringed islands and secret waterways with beds of papyrus, hippo grass and water lilies. The abundance of water limits human occupancy; the delta, a 10,000-square-mile game preserve, teems with wildlife. The brief text includes a history of exploration (David Livingstone was among the first), a description of the topography and portraits of the local people. British photographers Johnson and Bannister have captured in 200 color photos a fabulous and timeless world, one of Earth's last wildernesses. Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Okavango: Sea of Land FROM THE PUBLISHER
Okavango is Africa's lost Eden, a 10,000-square-kilometer wilderness of islands, rivers, and swamps in northern Botswana, born where a slender thread of water confronts the Kalahari's desert sands. In Okavango, Peter Johnson and Anthony Bannister bring to life this timeless and compelling world, unchanged since the dawn of man. With 200 stunning photographs, described in careful, lyrical text, they offer a glimpse of one of Africa's most baffling mysteries, a world of water and sand that defies reason.