Cavallo amore mio
- 156 páginas
- 6 horas de lectura
Beryl Markham fue una autora inglesa que emigró a Kenia en su infancia. Su vida estuvo marcada por la aventura y la inconformidad, convirtiéndose en la primera entrenadora de caballos con licencia de Kenia y una consumada piloto. Capturó sus experiencias y su espíritu independiente en sus memorias más famosas, que fueron redescubiertas años después y encontraron una renovada popularidad. Su escritura a menudo se asocia con paisajes salvajes y un alma indómita.





Born in England and raised in Kenya, Beryl Markham was a notorious beauty. She trained race horses and had scandalous affairs, but she is most remembered for being a pioneering aviatrix. She became the first woman to cross the Atlantic Ocean and the first person to make it from London to New York nonstop. In Mary S. Lovell’s definitive biography, Beryl takes on new life—vividly portrayed by a master biographer whose knowledge of her subject is unparalleled.
Beryl Markham moved to Kenya with her father at the age of four and stayed until her death in 1986. Her incredible autobiography describes the Africa she learnt to love: her childhood surrounded by the tribal people, her tangles - often nearly fatal - with its wild animals and her passions for racehorses and aeroplanes. Markham achieved notoriety and success as a horse trainer when one of her horses won the most prestigious race in Kenya. She turned her hand to aeroplanes with Denys Finch Hatton, the lover of Karen Blixen, as a teacher and became the first woman in Kenya to receive a commercial pilot's licence. Her adventures and courageous career as a bush pilot are recounted in vivid detail here, along with the richness and fascination of life in Kenya in the twenties and thirties.