CANDICE MILLARD is the author of the New York Times bestsellers The River of Doubt, Destiny of the Republic, and Hero of the Empire. She lives in Kansas City, Kansas, with her husband and three children.
New York Times Bestseller • A Best Book of the Year: WASHINGTON
POST, NPR, GOODREADS, BOOKPAGE, Audible • One of The
Washington Post's 50 Notable Works of Nonfiction • One of
Smithsonian’s 10 best History Books of 2022 •
“River of the Gods is a lean, fast-paced account of the almost
absurdly dangerous quest by [Richard Burton and John Speke] to
solve the geographic riddle of their era. . . Candice Millard has
earned her legions of admirers. She is a graceful writer and a
careful researcher, and she knows how to navigate a tangled
tale.”
—The New York Times Book Review
“Millard’s research and very readable storytelling are admirable. .
. Ultimately, the identity of the person who first discovered the
source of the White Nile may be a trivial matter. Ms. Millard
conscientiously investigates the issue, of course, but River of the
Gods is compelling because she does justice to the psyches and
behavior of Burton and Speke—keenly flawed but enthralling,
sometimes marvelous people.”
—Wall Street Journal
“Millard recounts all of these travails with a fluid grace that
wears its learning lightly.”
—The Washington Post
“Millard . . . introduces a cast of characters and succeeds in
making each of them unforgettable. . . . Millard excels at
describing it all, balancing narrative flow with abundant details
that give a vast landscape its weight and power, clarify
complicated people and arduous journeys, and add those who have
gone largely unseen to the historical stage.”
—Book Page
"Meticulous research and suspenseful prose"
—The National Book Review
"Millard exhibits admirable skill in crafting narratives of
uncommon drama and detail ... A first-rate tale of 19th-century
exploration that rivals the best of the polar exploits.”
—Air Mail
“When it comes to narrative nonfiction, she’s the best… I
love her books. She has this way of finding a really fresh
way of telling an old story.”
—Erik Larson, New York Times bestselling author of The Splendid and
the Vile
"Millard is an outstanding narrative historian, with the gift of
breathing new life into long-forgotten stories, but what she does
best is communicate to the reader the horrid details of
suffering."
—Bookreporter
"Bestseller Millard (Hero of the Empire) recounts one of the
greatest 19th-century British colonial explorations in this
fascinating history. In 1854, the Royal Geographical Society chose
Richard Francis Burton to lead an expedition to locate the source
of the White Nile, the longest branch of the Nile River. After one
member of his original team died before the journey, Burton hired
Lt. John Hanning Speke of the Bengal Native Infantry, an avid
hunter and member of the British aristocracy. Tensions between the
two strong-willed men quickly surfaced, but Burton was more
fortunate in his hiring of Sidi Mubarak Bombay, a formerly enslaved
East African, as head gun carrier. While Burton recuperated from an
illness, Speke and Bombay reached Lake Nyanza (also known as Lake
Victoria), which Speke claimed as the Nile’s source. Burton
maintained that Speke had failed to settle the question, but before
the two men could publicly debate the issue in 1864, Speke died in
a hunting accident. Subsequent explorations, in which Bombay took
part, proved Speke’s theory. Millard’s lushly detailed adventure
story keeps a steady eye on the racial power dynamics involved in
this imperialist endeavor and brilliantly illuminates the
characters of Burton, Speke, and Bombay. Readers will be riveted.
Illus."
—Publishers Weekly (starred)
"Millard, the former National Geographic journalist who took
readers down an uncharted tributary of the Amazon with Teddy
Roosevelt in River of Doubt, now turns her attention to the
exploration of Africa’s Nile River. Europe became obsessed with
ancient Egypt in the 19th century following the 1799 discovery of
the Rosetta Stone. Britain’s Royal Geographic Society resolved to
locate the headwaters of the Nile, aiming to land an expedition on
the east coast of Africa and explore inland, amid rumors of a lake
region in the central part of the continent. Enter Captain Richard
Burton and John Hanning Speke, two men with different temperaments
and interests, who had already crossed paths during an ill-fated
expedition in Somaliland along with their trusted guide Sidi
Mubarak Bombay, who was formerly enslaved. Millard sets the stage
for their bitter rivalry after they return from their harrowing
East African expedition in 1859 and Speke announces he has found
the source of the Nile, naming it Lake Victoria.
VERDICT It’s been nearly six years since popular Millard published
Hero of the Empire, and eager fans and armchair travelers will
gladly sign up for this enthralling and heartbreaking
adventure."
—Library Journal (starred)
"The lure of uncharted territory.
The Rosetta Stone—discovered by French soldiers in 1799, seized by
a British envoy, and deciphered 23 years later—set off an obsessive
interest in Egypt, including by the newly established Royal
Geographical Society, to find the headwaters of the Nile.
Bestselling author Millard, a former writer and editor for National
Geographic, offers a tense, vibrant history of several dramatic
expeditions across East Africa that finally resulted in a
successful discovery. Drawing on archival sources and her own
multiple trips to Africa following the explorers’ paths, Millard
creates a palpable sense of the daunting task undertaken by three
ambitious men: the magnetic, impulsive, and often combative Richard
Burton; John Hanning Speke, an aristocratic infantry lieutenant and
passionate hunter whose initial interest in East Africa was largely
for the animals he could kill; and their devoted and resourceful
native guide, Sidi Mubarak Bombay a former enslaved person whose
intimate knowledge of tribes and terrain proved to be
indispensable. Guides like Bombay, Millard argues persuasively,
formed the indisputable backbone of British exploration. After
abortive starts, the expedition left Zanzibar on June 27, 1857. The
explorers and their team, woefully underfunded, faced innumerable
hardships: scorching heat, drenching storms, near starvation,
massive desertions, and threats from “large, powerful, and
politically complex” East African kingdoms. Illness and injury
dogged them, as they suffered from typhoid, smallpox, infected
wounds, and bone-shattering fevers. Speke suffered near blindness
from ophthalmia, and he became deaf in one ear after a beetle
burrowed into his ear canal. For nearly a year, Burton lay
paralyzed. Although they became the first Europeans to reach Lake
Tanganyika, they could not proceed together to Lake Nyanza, which
Speke insisted was the Nile’s source. Back in London, Speke cruelly
denounced Burton’s leadership, securing funding for his own
expedition. Although Burton died poor and angry, his legacy, unlike
Speke’s, has endured.
An engrossing, sharply drawn adventure tale.
—Kirkus Review (starred)
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |