Kalahari Diaries: Impressions of a Desert People
Spanning fifteen years of expeditions first begun in 1975, this captivating memoir takes the reader on a journey into the heart of the Kalahari Desert and records, from an outsider’s perspective, the vanishing hunter-gatherer culture of the
San people (or ‘Bushmen’, as some call themselves) of the Kalahari.
Fifty years ago, a young South African psychology professor set off on the first of what would be many expeditions into the Kalahari Desert. There he began keeping a daily journal. Out in the bush he recorded his impressions of one of humanity’s
oldest societies, even as it was disappearing before him. Half a century later, with the Bushmen’s way of life now mostly extinct, Allen Zimbler’s vivid words and photography provide a powerful depiction of a people who could survive in the harshest of conditions. Theirs was an deeply egalitarian, cooperative, knowledgeable and resourceful society, one in which men and women enjoyed equal standing.
But Bushmen are now threatened across southern Africa with marginalization and discrimination. Since diamonds were first discovered in the Central Kalahari Reserve in the early 1980s, the Bushmen of the region have been fighting for the right to their ancestral lands. They have suffered three big clearances – their homes dismantled, their water supply destroyed – and most have been moved to resettlement camps far from the reserve and forced to abandon their traditional lifestyle as hunter-gatherers.
With its tales of poison-arrow hunts, water making and bone-throwing divination, Kalahari Diaries offers a fascinating glimpse of a vanishing culture and invites the reader to consider a different, more harmonious way of living. It aims to raise funds to build schools for one of the last remaining traditional Bushman communities in northern Namibia.
By Allen Zimbler
September 2025
ISBN: 978-1-913645-91-5
Hardback, 204 pages
242 × 170 mm, 80 illus.
£30 / €35 / $40About the author
Dr Allen Zimbler has had a lifelong interest in the San people of southern Africa. His world-class library of some 8,000 works concerning the Bushmen is being donated as a collection to Magdalene College, Cambridge. He is Chairman of the Ju/’hoansi Development Fund, a charitable organisation that is raising funds for the building of schools for Khoisan children in the Nyae-Nyae Conservancy of northern Namibia, providing mother-tongue education in remote villages.
Appendix
Kalahari Diaries includes a photographic appendix of Bushman artefacts from the author’s collection – of divination bones, bows and arrows and vials of the poison grubs used to tip them, jewellery of ostrich eggshell and porcupine quills and bags of antelope hide, amongst many others.