Front:
BLACK SHEEP
ADVENTURES IN WEST AFRICA
BY JEAN KENYON MACKENZIE
The real significance of missions can never be realized from reports or from
missionary exhortations. The true record is interred in letters from jungle or
desert to understanding friends at home, written sometimes in dejection, some-
times in exultation, always in faith. Such are these letters of Miss Mackenzie,
written through long years of ever-increasing comprehension of the hearts and
minds of the black folk.
Miss Mackenzie is the daughter of the Rev. Robert Mackenzie of New York.
She went out in 1904 under the Presbyterian Board of Foreign Missions to the
German Kamerun, Equatorial West Africa, and to the northern part of the
French Congo. Her letters not only reveal convincingly the unconquerable spirit
of the missionary, but also show a delightful and poetic appreciation of the
beauty of the country and the human appeal of the primitive African people.
Profusely illustrated from photographs. $1.50 net.
Back:
BLACK SHEEP
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BY
Jean Kenyon Mackenzie
This record of an American girl's
adventures in the African jungle be-
longs with “The Letters of a Woman
Homesteader” and “A Hilltop on
the Marne,” as a thrilling story of a
woman's actual experiences.
Illustrated. $1.50 net
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