Kat Gordon: The Hunters,
9780008253073, Harper Collins, paperback
(German Edition: Kenya Valley, 9783455002775, Atlantik Verlag, gebunden)
Vacation time, time to escape, to dream and relax.
Ever since visiting Kenya for
the first time in the late seventies have I held a special affection for Kenya
and Africa which has affected many of my reading choices over the years. To name only a few, Karen Blixen’s classic and famous “Out of
Africa”, Beryl Markham’s “West of Sunset”, Kuki Gallman’s “I dreamed of
Africa”, Paula McLain's “Circling the
sun” and James Fox's “White Mischief”. My latest pick, Kat Gordon's “The
Hunters” which is set in 1925-1938 in what
was then British East Africa borrows heavily from the characters in “White
Mischief”, also called “The Happy Valley set” but giving them new identities
and using the liberties of fiction.
The beauty, wealth, drinking
and sexual activities of members of the Happy Valley Set during wild parties were talked and frowned upon by the mostly conservative white East African community. Theo
Miller is fifteen when he and his sister Maud arrive in Nairobi with their parents, their father is to oversee the building of the new railroad in Kenya. Theo with
his good looks immediately catches the attention of Sylvie de Croy and Freddie with their circle of heavily partying friends. He has his first
introduction into drinking and watching their scandalous behavior very soon, feeling
strangly attracted in particular to Sylvie, her husband Nicolas, a
French Count and Freddie, Sylvie’s lover. Theo and Maud fall in love with their
new life considering Kenya their true home, fascinated by the wilderness, the
animals and native tribes. The life of the British settlers from mostly wealthy
backgrounds and their life style is something completely foreign to us today as was their paternising behavior towards the Kenyan tribes using them as cheap labour to afford their life style. Theo
has a complex relationship with his mother who is at first less than enchanted with
her new home, distancing herself from her children and husband with volunteer
work chosing to live mostly in Nairobi and not in their Riff valley house in Kiboko.
The novel is told from Theo's
perspective over 13 years of his life, from his coming of age into adulthood, his destructive passion for Sylvie and admiration for Freddie, his love for his sister Maud which lasts through all the unexpected turns life holds in store for them . “The
Hunters” makes for a great holiday read, an entertaining page-turner with many colorful
characters painting a very atmospheric portrait of Kenya up to WW II. I found the
ending a little too predictable but this did not diminish my joy reading "The Hunters".
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