'Mad White Giant' is Benedict Allen's tale of his one-man expedition from the mouth of the Orinoco river across the Amazon basin to the place where the sun rises. It is an enthralling journey, a learning curve at every step for the author, who by his own admission is a changed man by the time he re-emerges from the jungle among the cut branches of a cassava field at Macapa, near the mouth of the Amazon. The book is insightful in its innocence as 'Louco Benedito' simply records what he observes and undergoes along the way without the soapbox commentary that so often mars the writings of others - it is, as he says, merely the experience of "a young white man launching out into an exotic world which he didn't, and couldn't, understand." And this is its attraction and joy, the portrayal of a world in the bold colours of youth that allows the reader to draw his own opinion on matters without too much in the way of authorial didacticism. The reader's journey is as thoroughly invigorating as the young explorer's. Our initial excitement at Allen's great expedition, fuelled by such wonderful encounters with characters like Zorola, Tautau and Yepe, is soured by the same fruits that he himself is forced to taste, namely the exploitations and temptations of modernity and the western world that pervade the Amazonian gloom and corrupt the purity of the indigenous Indian tribes and their cultures. He tells us, as he dozes in a hammock at the end of his journey, that in the jungle, "I...left part of myself behind." This is overwhelmingly true. The bright eyes through which we look at the beginning of the book become glazed with a weary wisdom, even if he doesn't explicate it himself, and we as readers are privy to the lessons that he has learnt the hard way.
'Mad White Giant' is at one level a brilliant account of a man daring to live out his dream, whilst at the same time is a record of the strife, conflict and corruption that inevitably arise when first-world meets third-world, a loss of innocence not only for the author but also for many of those he meets. In every way it is a worthwhile read.