, 19th-century watercolour featured on the back cover. The book is part of the series (formerly belonging to series) in the "
Découvertes Gallimard" collection. According to the tradition of "Découvertes", which is based on an abundant pictorial documentation and a way of bringing together visual documents and texts, enhanced by printing on coated paper, as commented in ''
L'Express'', "genuine monographs, published like
art books". It's almost like a "
graphic novel", replete with colour plates. The
body text is divided into five chapters: I, "A World to Explore"; II, "The Mystery of the Source of the Nile"; III, "Livingstone's Mission in Southern Africa"; IV, "Into the Heart of the Forest"; V, "The Explorer's Profession". The text follows the steps of those explorers in Africa, such as
Burton,
Speke,
Grant,
Baker,
Stanley,
Livingstone, but also
Brazza and
Marchand. The main focus is on the
Nile and
Congo explorations and on Livingstone; it has nothing on
West Africa, although
Mary Kingsley makes an appearance. However, in the sequel , West Africa is the focal point. In less than fifty years, in the late 19th century, these explorers penetrated the heart of Africa, discovered the
sources of the Nile, explored the
Congo and
Zambezi Basins, surveyed the
Mountains of the Moon. But these explorers also revealed the riches of the black continent to the
European colonisers. The "Documents" section at the back features excerpts from the explorers' own journals which is divided into five parts: 1, Preparing an Expedition; 2, The Explorers Confront Africa; 3, The Advent of Colonialism; 4, The Explorer's Changing Image; 5, Patrons. These are followed by a map, a chronology, further reading, list of illustrations and an index. The book has been translated into Dutch, English, German, Italian, Japanese, Russian, South Korean, Spanish, simplified and traditional Chinese. == Reception ==