Hermann NordenHermann Norden FRGS (1868/1869–November 1931) was an American[1] travel writer. He was a fellow of the Royal Geographical Society and the American Geographical Society. Of German origin, Norden made his money as a cotton broker in South Carolina. He died in London after falling and fracturing his skull in Leicester Square, aged 62.[1] His book "White and Black in East Africa" was a great success,[1] however it was criticised in African Affairs as "of a surface nature... marred by many inaccuracies, exaggerations and statements which are both sweeping and incorrect."[2] His book "Byways of the Tropic Seas: Wanderings Among the Solomons and in the Malay Archipelago" was criticised in Nature as superficial and inaccurate.[3] For his book "Africa's Last Empire", he met Ras Tafari (Haile Selassi).[4] His last book, A Wanderer in Indo-China, was published a week before his death.[1] Books
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