No Picnic on Mount Kenya: An Epic Tale of Three POWs' Escape and Unforgettable Journey

By: Felice Benuzzi (Author)

Experience the incredible story of Felice Benuzzi's daring escape from a World War II POW camp in No Picnic on Mount Kenya: The Story of Three POWs Escape to Adventure. This African travel guide is easy to read and understand, making it perfect for anyone looking to explore the continent. With its captivating narrative and overall satisfaction, this book is sure to provide an unforgettable adventure.
87
B2B Rating
7 reviews

Review rating details

Value for money
90
Overall satisfaction
89
Genre
90
Easy to understand
88
Easy to read
88
Binding and pages quality
91

Details of No Picnic on Mount Kenya: An Epic Tale of Three POWs' Escape and Unforgettable Journey

  • ISBN-13 ‏ ‎: 978-0857053770
  • World War II History (Books): World War II History
  • Dimensions ‏ ‎: 5.25 x 1 x 7.75 inches
  • Item Weight ‏ ‎: 10.2 ounces
  • Customer Reviews: 4.3/5 stars of 573 ratings
  • Mountain Climbing: Mountain Climbing
  • ISBN-10 ‏ ‎: 0857053779
  • Publisher ‏ ‎: MacLehose Press
  • Language ‏ ‎: English
  • Best Sellers Rank: #150 in General Africa Travel Books#246 in Mountain Climbing#2,192 in World War II History
  • Paperback ‏ ‎: 320 pages
  • General Africa Travel Books: General Africa Travel Books

Comments

Amazon Customer: This is a great adventure story of men stuck in the tedium of prison life who embark on a quest which many who were better prepared fail

United States on Sep 03, 2022

Stuart Thompson: Marvelous book. I loved the author's sense of humour, especially displayed near the end and start of the book. You can see how for some of these men their silliness, often very inventive or satirical, at times helped them assuage boredom as POWs or kept them going when they were exhausted on their self-inflicted travails. The author demonstrates an eclectic, to my mind interesting and often enlightened, knowledge of the world, often based on literary experience. References to other authors are dotted throughout the text. The fact that they chose to go on this almost unimaginable journey when so many others failed at earlier hurdles with so much help and they were just 3 Prisoners of War, is part of what makes me feel on occasion throughout amazed at their feat, enthusiasm and vision. There is much to think about here. The author himself reflects seriously as well as humourously about what life as a prisoner of war, or any other person confined in some way, which we can perhaps relate to in recent times due to covid more than before, reveals to a person about themselves. Their quest to discover themselves in a more unrestricted way by deciding to escape, not to go to Italian or...

United Kingdom on Jul 20, 2021

Christopher prost: Never knew this episode really happened...it was a gripping account and well worth reading!

Canada on Mar 28, 2021

DWIGHT J. PENAS: I read this book for my book group. I'm generally fond of memoirs -- even those involving adventure. And this didn't do much to change my mind or taste. But it does have its satisfactions: Questions about the mental stability of the climbers aboind. And the tale of their survival seems unbelievable (though I don't doubt that the book is factual. I won't read it again, but I really don't consider it a waste of time.

United States on Jan 07, 2021

M. Hunter: Most books about climbing mountains are by and about people who have good clothing, footwear, ropes, axes, crampons, ironmongery and a fair amount of decent food. These men, escaping with difficulty from a POW camp, had to make everything themselves, using whatever was available in material and skills among their prisoner comrades; and the wonder is that they were able to achieve what they did, and that they survived.
The account of this attempt to reach the highest point of Mount Kenya, the reasons why it proved impossible, and the success in getting to a lesser summit and planting their flag there, and of their return to the prison camp, because what they wanted was to climb the mountain, not to escape, is truly heroic.
Other mountaineering books describe more successful expeditions, but I doubt whether many (or indeed any) of the big names in recent peak-bagging epics could have done what these three Italians did, and endured the hardships, not for fame or money, but just to climb the mountain.
I nearly gave the book only 4 stars because of a few over-poetic pieces, but decided that it would be grossly unfair: the way Italians (or French or Germans) write is not the...

United Kingdom on Feb 29, 2020

mrzbsn: Il testo mi é stato suggerito da un Console che lavora all'estero e che ama particolarmente la figura di Benuzzi, di cui io vergognosamente non sapevo nulla. Nato a Vienna, ma cresciuto a Trieste, questo diplomatico italiano esce in maniera intensa dalle pagine di questa sua meravigliosa avventura sul monte Kenya durante gli anni di prigionia in un campo inglese; la scrittura é asciutta e diretta, non ci sono analisi psicologiche o giri eleganti di sinonimi accattivanti: Benuzzi é roccia solida, colore rosa Dolomiti che arriva al cuore e ci resta.

Italy on Aug 09, 2019

READER: Very interesting tale of adventure and derring-do about three Italian POW’s interned in Kenya during WW2 who break out of their camp to climb Mr Kenya, after spending months accumulating and making the kit, clothing and food they will need. A bit tedious in its style of writing (probably because it’s translated from Italian?) but an amazing tale nevertheless.

United States on Nov 22, 2018

Kevin Martin: Came at this book from the POW angle, and although the first third of the book covered his period behind bars, it was all directed to the mountaineering challenge of climbing Mt Kenya, at over 17,000 ft, a feat even the best equiped and prepared of climbers found difficult.
The balance of the book was part travelogue of the various fauna found in the high mountains, part mountain climbing comparable to the author's previous experience of Alpine slopes.
The book just nipped along, and although an 'enemy' you did kind of will him to do well, almost entirely because of the totally amateurish efforts to furnish himself with the minimum food and equipment required to take on the challenge. Without spoiling the ending as to whether he was successful, you did feel that it was a story worth telling, and even although I have no interest in mountain climbing, you understood his desire to conquer.
Just ok, but I can imagine as one of the first to walk/climb this area, he covered how an emotional Italian would feel.

United Kingdom on Jan 25, 2018

J. Stern: This is a great story and a very good book. While it is billed as a daring escape followed by a harrowing climb, I saw it as something else. The story begins with the author languishing in a barren POW camp in a foreign country with virtually no chance of escaping and making it out of the enemy country in order to return home Italy. The challenge of POW camp was to fight boredom, pettiness, and malnourishment. The author, apparently a rock climber in his civilian days although this was never mentioned outright, responded to this situation by realizing he needed a goal, something to live for and a way to rise above the monotony. So he gave himself an inspiring and also absurdly difficult challenge—one that would have been difficult even for well-trained, well-equipped, and expert climbers.
While the actual breaking out of the camp was relatively easy, the fact that they pretty much accomplished, or even dared to attempt, the bigger goal was captivating.The descriptions of Mount Kenya and what they saw and the challenges (risks of: capture, starvation, exhaustion attack by various animals, the technical aspects of the climb, etc) were good and very interesting. Reading the...

United States on Oct 30, 2017

Nancy Laplante: It was amazing to me that these three pow's broke out of camp to climb a mountain. Achieving what they did must have helped them last for the remaining years of their imprisonment. The author's humor was impressive. I read this at the same time I was reading "Unbroken". Even though the treatment by the British was not brutal as it was by the Japanese, the Italians were still imprisoned for years, and it affected them too.

United States on Jun 14, 2014



No Picnic on Mount Kenya: An Epic Tale of Three POWs' Escape and Unforgettable Journey "Bibi's Kitchen: Exploring the Rich Flavors of African Cuisine from the Indian Ocean Coast" Peter Allison's "Don't Run: True Tales of a Botswana Safari Guide"
No Picnic on Mount Kenya: An Epic Tale of Three POWs' Escape and Unforgettable Journey "Bibi's Kitchen: Exploring the Rich Flavors of African Cuisine from the Indian Ocean Coast" Peter Allison's "Don't Run: True Tales of a Botswana Safari Guide"
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Total Reviews 7 reviews 105 reviews 44 reviews
ISBN-13 ‏ ‎ 978-0857053770 978-1984856739 978-0762796472
World War II History (Books) World War II History
Dimensions ‏ ‎ 5.25 x 1 x 7.75 inches 8.27 x 1.13 x 10.25 inches 5.5 x 0.8 x 8 inches
Item Weight ‏ ‎ 10.2 ounces 2.6 pounds 0.705 ounces
Customer Reviews 4.3/5 stars of 573 ratings 4.8/5 stars of 1,361 ratings 4.5/5 stars of 3,876 ratings
Mountain Climbing Mountain Climbing
ISBN-10 ‏ ‎ 0857053779 1984856731 0762796472
Publisher ‏ ‎ MacLehose Press Ten Speed Press Lyons Press; 2nd ed. edition
Language ‏ ‎ English English English
Best Sellers Rank #150 in General Africa Travel Books#246 in Mountain Climbing#2,192 in World War II History #2 in General Africa Travel Books#3 in African Cooking, Food & Wine#77 in Vegan Cooking #2 in Botswanan Travel Guides#30 in General Africa Travel Books#198 in Travelogues & Travel Essays
Paperback ‏ ‎ 320 pages 288 pages
General Africa Travel Books General Africa Travel Books General Africa Travel Books General Africa Travel Books
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