Series: Resnick's Library of African Adventure
Paperback: 272 pages
Publisher: Alexander Books; First Edition edition (August 1995)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1570900132
ISBN-13: 978-1570900136
Product Dimensions: 0.8 x 6 x 9 inches
Shipping Weight: 13.6 ounces
Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars See all reviews (11 customer reviews)
Best Sellers Rank: #3,298,693 in Books (See Top 100 in Books) #10 in Books > Science & Math > Nature & Ecology > Field Guides > Regional #3830 in Books > Sports & Outdoors > Hunting & Fishing > Hunting #38962 in Books > Sports & Outdoors > Outdoor Recreation
I've read a number of African hunting and adventure classics including titles by F.C. Selous, Carl Akley and others. Alexander Lake was a comparative late-comer to Africa (early 20th century) but his respect and love for the people and wildlife he writes about are evident. His writing style is authentic, without varnish or too much introspection. The sense you get from this book is that Lake was a man of action who started out as a pragmatist wanting to make some money out of his adventure, but ended up being fundamentally and unexpectedly changed by Africa. The book is filled with fascinating anecdotes of a wild African world which no longer exists. Those of you who enjoyed Isak Dinesen's Out of Africa will find this book equally authentic and personal but less sophisticated in tone. This is a great read that will leave you with a vivd sense of place and time, and a feeling for what Alexander Lake and the Africa of his day were like. If you are an African hunting/adventure buff, you will enjoy this read a great deal.
I first read this book as a young boy in the late 1960's or early 1970's. It was actually first printed circa 1953, but for some reason this information isn't available on the website (at least I couldn't find it). IF you are looking for a modern book, this isn't one.Having said that, the book itself is quite entertaining, and gives a realistic look at big game hunting in the first half of the 20th century.Politically correct readers will be upset at the descriptions of the native Africans, but how many of them (PCs) are likely to read a book about African hunting adventures? Lake is probably typical of his era, and shouldn't be judged by today's standards. Having said THAT though, some of the characters Lake takes on safari are surely racist boors who deserved a few lashes from a sjambok.Less literary than Hemingway, and aimed a more of a general (non-hunting) audience than Ruark, this is a pleasant read about a man who loved Africa.
This is a fine little book on African hunting. It is a bit outdated. As such some of the names of places and animals which have changed in the past 40 years will leave some readers wondering. All in all though it is fine reading. Covers many species, such as the smaller antelopes, which are commonly overlooked in safari books. This book is suitable for younger readers interested in African hunting, or hunting in general. It's small size and easy reading style make it particularly apealing to the teen and pre-teen reader, but do not take this to mean it is a kid's book. It's not!TE
I first read this book while in grade school during the late fifties . I was captivated by it and continued to borrow it from my local library until it became so shabby that the library discarded it ( much to my chagrin ) without replacing it . I have since found a replacement . I have enjoyed the read as much now as then. While Lake will never go down in literary history as an immortal bard , he has an easy to read style that makes one feel like one is sitting with him by a campfire after a long day's trek , listening to the tales of a man who spent much time in the African bush hunting the animals there in a time long past . Each chapter focuses on a different species ( or two ) . Lake then proceeds to give his memoirs on each species and tells of their habits and of his encounters with them. I don't really care that some of his stories are a bit far fetched or that they may be proved wrong by contemporary research ( a mamba that can run down a horse ???) I just simply enjoyed this book for what it is. It is a fun and very entertaining read . So pull up a rock by the campfire while Mr. Lake cleans his Lee Enfield .303 and drift away to a time never to return and enjoy a few well spun yarns about big and small game hunting in Africa when it really was the Dark Continent .
This is one of my favorite books...I read the original printing as an early teen and I am thankful Resnick brought it back in a new printing. I especially enjoy his dissection of the mistakes made by LTC Patterson, the engineer who became famous retelling his exploits tracking the "killers of Tsavo." The book is an enjoyable read of a long-gone era. Lake wrote for many magazines, and this book is obviously a compilation of these. Well worth the read.
Lakes writing style is simple and direct. Do the stories sound punched up a bit? I'm really not sure, since the nature of big game hunting was over the top it naturally follows his stories of those adventures would sound that way to the reader, tucked safely in his home . He is as candid about his mistakes as he is about his wins. I read another reviewer taking cause with Lakes knowledge of firearms. As someone who personally knows about firearms I have to conclude that reviewer knows next to nothing about them. The book is a reprint done in 1995. There is an interesting story behind Mike Resnick deciding to have this book put back into print. I highly recommend it and also reading about Lake's father, who was an interesting fellow himself. After finishing the book I was loaned I knew I had to see if I could find a copy for my personal library. I can tell it's a grand book to pull out on a lazy Sunday to savor with a glass of Jameson. I'm going to see if his daughter will have it released as an ebook. Really, I can't recommend this book enough to any reader with a fascination for the period of the Great White Hunter.
Killers in Africa: The Truth About Animals Lying in Wait and Hunters Lying in Print (Resnick's Library of African Adventure) Serial Killers: The 10 Most Notorious Serial Killers In Texas And Their Horrible True Crime Cases (True Crime, Serial Killers) Serial Killers: The Worlds Most Notorious And Ferocious Serial Killers: An In Depth Analysis Of Serial Killers Minds Colombian Killers: The True Stories of the Three Most Prolific Serial Killers on Earth (True Crime, Serial Killers, Murderers) Serial Killers: Most Horrific Serial Killers Biographies, True Crime Cases, Murderers, 2nd Book! (True Crime, Serial Killers Uncut, Crime, Horror Stories, Horrible Crimes, Homicides) Serial Killers: True Crimes.: Chilling & Deadly Serial Killers (Serial Killers True Crime Collections. Book 1) TWISTED SERIAL KILLERS. True Stories of Sick Serial Killers: Serial Killers & Psychopaths. Serial Killer Collection. Lying in Wait: Ann Rule's Crime Files: Vol.17 Lying in Wait: Ann Rule's Crime Files, Book 17 Wait Wait...Don't Tell Me! Famous People Who Returned Our Calls: Celebrity Highlights from the Oddly Informative News Quiz The Best of Wait Wait...Don't Tell Me! (NPR) Serial Killers True Crime: Chilling True Crime Cases of the Worlds Most Twisted Serial Killers and Criminals, Book 1 Belle Gunness: The True Story of The Slaying Mother: Historical Serial Killers and Murderers (True Crime by Evil Killers Book 14) Christopher Wilder: The True Story of The Beauty Queen Killer: Historical Serial Killers and Murderers (True Crime by Evil Killers Book 16) The Killing Cousins: The True Story of The Slaying Cousins: Historical Serial Killers and Murderers (True Crime by Evil Killers Book 11) Colombian Killers: The True Stories of the Three Most Prolific Serial Killers on Earth The Case of the SMILEY FACE KILLERS.: A breed of Serial Killers you have never met before.... SERIAL KILLERS THAT WILL GIVE YOU NIGHTMARES.: Serial Killers & Psychopaths. Serial Killer Collection. Heartprints of Africa: A Family's Story of Faith, Love, Adventure, and Turmoil (East Africa Series Book 1) How Africa Shaped the Christian Mind: Rediscovering the African Seedbed of Western Christianity (Early African Christianity Set)