The Copper of Itenge
A Story of Forgotten Land, Dangerous Riches, and the Last Great Frontier
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Narrated by:
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Virtual Voice
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By:
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Johann Wentzel
This title uses virtual voice narration
The Copper of Itenge
Book Five of The Namib Frontiers Series
The final novel in the acclaimed Namib Frontiers Series, The Copper of Itenge is the story of Michael Stent — explorer, adventurer, road man, and the next great moral force in southern Africa.
When Elbereth and John Young discover a file among Simon Shield’s final records in Swakop, they uncover satellite images suggesting rich untapped copper deposits north of Kazungula Crossing. Simon’s note is clear: this is not one country’s problem, but a dangerous frontier where four sovereignties, old forgotten history, and living people may collide.
That forgotten land is Itenge.
Hidden beyond the practical maps, north of the Zambezi and near the strange four-country pressure line of Namibia, Botswana, Zambia, and Zimbabwe, Itenge is a place of elephant grass, flood lines, old graves, dark ritual, chiefs, elders, and memory carried in people rather than paper. It is also a place the modern world ignored — until copper entered the satellites.
Michael is sent east to Katima Mulilo, where the McMahon family becomes the operations base for the last great expedition of the series. From there he travels into omitted country, where roads fail, storms split the sky, crocodiles rule crossings, and outsiders are judged long before they are trusted.
But Michael does not go north to conquer, westernise, or claim.
He goes to help the land speak before the copper does.
As mining interests, corrupt intermediaries, district papers, and old fear structures begin to close in, Michael must win the confidence of Chief Liyongo, earn the respect of Nasilele, survive the sangoma’s shadow, and make the people of Itenge visible before greed turns their homeland into another forgotten theft.
Epic, dangerous, and deeply rooted in the landscapes and moral immensities of southern Africa, The Copper of Itenge is a powerful novel of belonging, courage, restraint, and the last frontier that had to be protected before it could be named