http://www.bbc.com/news/blogs-trending-36716288
It all starts off with a bit of "Maybe this is just pointless outrage?" vibe.
Still, seems a bit harsh.
Oh Zimba, you lovable scamp!
Bonus!
It gets worse though, much much worse.
This is the kind of story that makes me re-watch 'Green Inferno'.
You? I assume that most of you are sufficiently worldly that an actress bullshitting in a book doesn't shock you, but this is admittedly terrible judgement.
It all starts off with a bit of "Maybe this is just pointless outrage?" vibe.
So far, not so bad. People can be really oversensitive sometimes, right?BBC said:An actress, whose memoir about her student gap year trip doing aid work in Africa has provoked a large online backlash, says she is dismayed by the negative reaction to her book.
Louise Linton has been accused of exhibiting a "white saviour complex" in "In Congo's Shadow: One girl's perilous journey to the heart of Africa" which recounts her time in Zambia where she volunteered as an 18-year-old in 1999.
Well that seems both unlikely, and a little tactless. A point made by some on Twiter...BBC said:In the book, Linton writes about a night she spent in hiding from the threat of "armed rebels" in her village and describes herself as a "central character" in the events. "I tried not to think what the rebels would do to the 'skinny white Muzungu with long angel hair' if they found me." A sentence that has offended many users on twitter.

Still, seems a bit harsh.
Oh fucking wow. I get it now.BBC said:I try to remember a smiling gap-toothed child with HIV whose greatest joy was to sit on my lap and drink from a bottle of Coca-Cola," she writes. "Zimba taught me many beautiful words but the one I like the most is Nsansa. Happiness."
Heh.BBC said:This sentence prompted a parody account in the name of Zimba, the six-year-old orphan who Linton spent time with in Zambia.

Oh Zimba, you lovable scamp!
Bonus!

It gets worse though, much much worse.
Oh boy, a claim!BBC said:...As the #LintonLies hashtag began to trend, others spotted what they regarded as discrepancies in Linton's account. In the passage, in which Linton describes a night she spent in hiding. She writes: "As monsoon season came and went, the Hutu-Tutsi conflict in neighbouring (sic) Congo began to escalate and then spill over into Zambia with repercussions all along the lake." But some have questioned who Linton was hiding from.


This is the kind of story that makes me re-watch 'Green Inferno'.
You? I assume that most of you are sufficiently worldly that an actress bullshitting in a book doesn't shock you, but this is admittedly terrible judgement.