Daniel Metcalfe was born in London in 1979. After graduating in Classics from Oxford University, he spent over a year in Iran and Central Asia, which inspired his first book, Out of Steppe- The Lost Peoples of Central Asia. It was shortlisted for the Banff Mountain Book Award 2009 and the Dolman Travel Award 2010. His recent travels in Portuguese-speaking Africa have given rise to Blue Dahlia, Black Gold- A Journey into Angola. Daniel has written for the Economist, Guardian, Financial Times, Conde Nast Traveller and the Literary Review.
This gritty book gives an in-depth account of Angola... and captures the corruption of a country with a multimillionaire elite and many dirt poor. * The Times * An invigorating, eye-opening and fascinating study * Financial Times * Step forward Daniel Metcalfe, whose account of his three-month exploration of [Angola] doesn't shirk from describing the appalling poverty but manages to reach [an] optimistic conclusion. -- Best Books for Summer 2013 * Financial Times * A curious tenderloin-abroad-tale that is both diligent and gripping in its portrait of a country torn apart. * Scotsman * Metcalfe explore[s] Angola by road to get under the skin of a nation in which corruption and nepotism are rife... Along the way, [he] cleverly weaves in Angola's colonial history, including Portugal's shocking slave-trading past, civil war and rapid rise of the nouveau riche... Angola's extraordinary cocktail of corruption, oil wealth, destitution and post-colonial blues adds an altogether grittier dimension. * The Times *