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The Masked Rider: Cycling in West Africa

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The Masked Rider: Cycling in West Africa (ISBN 1550226673) is a 1996 non-fiction book written by Rush drummer Neil Peart about his bicycling travel through the African country of Cameroon.
Contents

[edit] Synopsis

In November 1988, Peart joined David Mozer's Bicycle Africa's month-long tour of Cameroon. Along with David, Neil would travel with three other strangers. Leonard; an African-American electrical engineer who is also a Vietnam vet. Elsa; a slender 60-year-old pacifist who would struggle to keep up with everyone and complain about everything. And Annie; a 30-something administrative assistant who was often scatterbrained.
Peart, an avid reader, brought two books on the trip with him, Nicomachean Ethics by Aristotle and Dear Theo by Vincent van Gogh, to read at rest stops and before bedtime. He would entwine thoughts about these two books throughout The Masked Rider.[1]

[edit] Southern tour

They all met in Douala, where they would first travel west along the coast of the Atlantic Ocean and then turn north to the heart of the former British Cameroon, stopping at many towns in Southern Cameroon along the way, like Tiko, Buea, Limbe, Kumba, Nkongsamba, Bafang, Bafoussam, Mbouda, Bamenda, Bafut, Ndop, Kumbo, Jakiri, and Foumban.
As they travel, Elsa starts complaining and is so tired after a few days, she almost throws in the towel, but it was David who encouraged her to keep going. Neil and the others also experience many things about each town; how nice some are (Bamenda) and how not so nice the others are (Kumba). Peart called Kumba "a real hell hole."[2] They also meet a Peace Corps volunteer named Kim in Jakiri who cooked them all hamburgers.[3]

[edit] Buses and trains

After the Southern tour is over, all five of then are crammed into a bus in Foumban to go to Yaounde where they spend two days before boarding a train to Ngaoundéré. Once there, they board another bus for Garoua. However, this bus would have problems, starting with the bus driver allowing both of one set of dual tires to blow out, and managing to obtain another tire to fix it all before continuing on.[4] Eventually, about 30 miles from Garoua, the bus's engine would give out, and they decide to start cycling again from there.[5]

[edit] Northern tour

From before Garoua, the gang starts cycling again to towns and villages in the north. After Garoua, it would be Hama Koussou, Dembo, Tchevi, Roumsiki, Guave, Mabas, Tourou, Mozogo, Mora, Waza, Ndiguina, Maltam, Kousséri, and finally, to N'Djamena, Chad.
During this time, Neil would get nervous while being accosted by a very, very drunk Cameroon soldier in Dembo,[6] he and Leonard would almost wind up in *****ia, they would enjoy looking at wildlife in a game park, Campement de Waza, while enjoying a bit of luxury,[7] and finally continuing onto N'Djamena, where they would have further adventures concluding the trip.
First, they had to obtain exit visas to leave Cameroon, then they would be told they'd need one to leave Chad, which they were afraid they couldn't get in time for the one flight per week. Peart would get so ill the night before worrying about all this, he couldn't face dinner, but the next morning was much better, and they all managed to leave the country and conclude the tour. Neil, Leonard, and Elsa would fly UTA to Paris, while David and Annie would fly Air Afrique to Mali.
At the end, Neil would spend a week with his then-wife, Jackie, in Paris.

[edit] Printings

Originally published in 1996 by Pottersfield Press, a small publishing company based in Nova Scotia, The Masked Rider was only available in Canadian bookstores, on Amazon.com, and at souvenir stands at Rush concerts. However, subsequent books by Peart were published by ECW Press, which actually had an international distributor, thus those books garnered more sales, and in 2004, ECW bought the publishing rights for The Masked Rider and released a second edition.
However, when the second edition of The Masked Rider came out, there were glaring mistakes that weren't seen by Peart until after the book went on sale at a concert in Milwaukee. Things like all the pictures missing, the original map of Cameroon was there, and not a more updated version, along with at least one glaring grammatical error. By the time the book was pulled from the shelves in Milwaukee, 26 copies of that book were sold. Neil then offered, on Rush's website, to replace those copies with a signed hardcover copy of the correct version. Accordingly, only two people took Neil up on the offer, leaving only 24 copies of the book in circulation.[8]
 
very good book by one of the if not the best drummer known to mankind.

haven't seen Rush in concert since Counterparts so too long.