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  • Zimbabwe

  • Years of Hope and Despair
  • By: Philip Barclay
  • Narrated by: Eric Brooks
  • Length: 11 hrs and 20 mins
  • 3.6 out of 5 stars (14 ratings)

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Zimbabwe

By: Philip Barclay
Narrated by: Eric Brooks
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Summary

Zimbabwe is a country both blessed and cursed. Arriving to work at the British Embassy in Zimbabwe, Philip Barclay found a temperate paradise and a sophisticated and charming population. But during a three-year stay in what used to be Africa's finest country, he saw it ruined by violence and grotesque economic mismanagement.

Philip Barclay was at the centre of the tumultuous events of 2008. Zimbabwe's people voted against Robert Mugabe, but their desire for change was denied as vicious squads of indoctrinated youths loyal to the ageing dictator launched a campaign of murder, rape, and destruction. In the wake of such terror, the country's economy and public services collapsed, leading to widespread poverty and epidemics of diseases that Zimbabwe had not seen in living memory.

This electrifying account records the violent excesses of a hated clique prepared to do anything to cling to power. It asks why the world stood by and watched as Zimbabwe burned and questions whether power-sharing between Robert Mugabe and Morgan Tsvangirai offers the way forward which the country needs. An honest account of a diplomat's confrontation with a brutal dictatorship, Zimbabwe is also a personal story of the resilience - despite their daily experience of despair and death - of Zimbabwe's people.

©2010 Philip Barclay (P)2013 Audible, Inc.
  • Unabridged Audiobook
  • Categories: History
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What listeners say about Zimbabwe

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So raw!

Being Zimbabwean born and having lived through everything in this book and more I was keen to see Zimbabwe through a diplomats eyes and hear his experiences.
The book captures so much and would a good read. However the narrator is awful, can’t pronounce half the words, places, names and truely looses the authenticity of the book. I really wish audible would choose better narrator’s for books based in Southern Africa.

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prophetic conclusion

you really tried to get all the native words and names pronounced correctly. thumbs up. your prediction on the future of the GNU were on point. are you a prophet? lol

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    4 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars

VERY poor narration

Good story but totally ruined in my opinion by terrible narration. Aren't you supposed to do some research on how to pronounce words before narrating? Also - is it so hard to put some life into things?!

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Really appalling narration.

The narration of this book makes it impossible to listen to. It is stilted with punctuation and emphasis in all the wrong places. I've not been able to finush it.

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Dull, dull, dull

What a boring book!

Having grown up in Zimbabwe I thought there might be something of interest, there wasn’t. Poor perfo

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    5 out of 5 stars

Awful, awful narration.

This book was ruined for me by the terrible narration. The reader did not know how to pronounce a single word. It is blatantly obvious that he mispronounced the surname of Morgan Tsvangirai the whole way through the book, only to have the proper pronunciation edited in later. (They missed a few though). Don't even get me started on Masvingo... Terrible. So, so bad.

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