From Library Journal:
This biography by a critically acclaimed scholarly British writer ( Stanley: The Making of an African Explorer , LJ 11/1/90) offers yet another portrait of the great Victorian explorer and scholar whose multifaceted talents and complex personality continue to fascinate. Unlike the 1990 best-selling biography by Edward Rice ( Captain Sir Richard Francis Burton , LJ 4/15/90), this work takes a psychobiographical approach and gives Fawn Brodie's earlier biography ( The Devil Drives , LJ 6/1/67) its just scholarly due. It also draws upon previously unused sources and adds much to the story of Burton's quest for the source of the Nile and his relationship with co-explorer John Hanning Speke. McLynn focuses on Burton's self-destructiveness, his lack of a stable identity, and the bisexual elements in his nature; he holds that an early disastrous failure with an Indian mistress caused Burton to marry the sexually unthreatening Isabel. McLynn's treatment of Isabel Burton at times takes on the tone of Burton's own capacity for contempt; she is treated more evenly in Brodie's biography, which has stood the test of time superbly. Nonetheless, McLynn's reconstruction of Burton's convoluted inner life is scholarly, well written, and compelling. For biography, history, and travel collections.
- Joan W. Gartland, Detroit P.L.
Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Publishers Weekly:
Award-winning British historian ( Jacobite Army in England ) McLynn surpasses himself with this thoroughly engrossing life of the Victorian explorer. Sir Richard Francis Burton (1821-1890) emerges as a man riddled with inconsistencies. He was a linguist fluent in 20 languages, yet his books were written in shamefully bad English, even if they were acknowledged as masterpieces. Despite his abhorrence of authority, he accepted a post with the British consul in India in 1842, opening the door to his anthropological studies. Burton achieved fame 10 years later, when he infiltrated a pilgrimage to Mecca at the risk of his life. That feat typifies the explorer's practices in immersing himself in the cultures of India, Arabia, Africa--and the Mormons in the U.S. McLynn also discusses Burton's fixation on sexual practices, particularly esoteric varieties of homosexuality in "forbidden" societies. And for all his involvement with the world's peoples, he was, according to McLynn, a bigot and a misogynist, despising even his devoted wife, Isabel. In this meticulously detailed biography, Burton is revealed as a Nietzschean poet, author and celebrated translator (e.g., The Arabian Nights ), a man of unequaled accomplishments, spoiled but a genuine genius. Illustrations.
Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc.
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.