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21 Reviews
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12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
If you like Africa, you'll love this one,
This review is from: Time to Die (Hardcover)
Retired guerrilla fighter Sean Courtney is over forty years old and facing the possibility of losing his professional hunting license. His long time friend and client Riccardo Monterro is approaching sixty and is hunting with Sean on his last safari accompanied by his beautiful twenty-six year old daughter Claudia. Hunting Tukutela, a grand old bull tusker who may carry the heaviest set of ivory in all of Africa the three of them along with an entourage of black trackers and gun bearers tenaciously follow the old bull across the border into war torn Mozambique.Caught up in the revolution Sean encounters one of his most bitter enemies from his guerrilla days and finds himself and his friends in a desperate struggle for survival. Amidst the horrors of war he falls in love with young Claudia and she likewise falls in love with him, but the trick is to get out of Mozambique alive so that they can enjoy their new found love. This is a tale loaded with Africana, from exotic wildlife, swarming insects, swamps, and vast wilderness to the political climate it is a story that can only be told by one who knows Africa as Wilbur Smith does. There is action, danger and romance along with such potentially volatile subjects as the African viewpoint of racism and wildlife management. If there's one criticism that I have it's that chapter seven seems to come into the story awkwardly. That is not to say that it is not well written by any means. The only problem that I have with it is that at least for me it seems to interrupt the flow of the story. This chapter covers the life of Tuketela from the time of his birth until he is being tracked by the Courtney hunting party in his old age. With a bit of tweaking this chapter would make an interesting short story in itself, but if it were entirely ommitted from this novel the story would not miss a beat. This is a small criticism and should not deter readers in any way. Last year I was introduced to Wilbur Smith when read The Diamond Hunters and I enjoyed it enough to seek out more Wilbur Smith. A Time to Die has a copyright date eighteen years more recent than The Diamond Hunters and as a tribute to Smith it is proof that good writers, like fine wine improve with age.
10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Captivating and Realistic,
By Pre Med Meg (Mundelein, IL United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: A Time to Die (Hardcover)
To call this book or Mr. Smith racist would be a mistake. The author demonstrates an intimate knowledge of african politics and is a well informed and well researched writer. You cannot truly grasp african politics unless you have lived there or read a book like this from Wilbur Smith. I have lived in Africa and I found the book illustrating the African struggle to survive in a technology-based era and the consequencial brutality and desperation of its nations to be true to life and riveting. If you want to learn something about Africa, put aside the preconceptions of the liberal media and get ready for a grimly realistic and action packed novel.
8 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Great Beach Book. Unique View of African Politics,
By
This review is from: A Time to Die (Mass Market Paperback)
This is another of Wilbur Smith's wonderful action efforts. "Time To Die" is a very enjoyable page turner. I found myself stealing from the office for an hour at a time to continue the adventure. His Sean Courtney character is better developed and more realistic than most other action-adventure protagonists. If you've never hunted, but you're curious about the hunter's mind-set, read this book. The insider view of late 20th century African politics is informative and revealing. Definitely worth 2 or 3 days. Great beach book.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Heart-pounding African adventure,
By Don Hollway "Author of [[ASIN:0741429497 Dang... (South Central Pennsylvania) - See all my reviews (REAL NAME)
This review is from: A Time to Die (Hardcover)
This was my first Wilbur Smith book. Since then I've read just about every one of his novels, but A Time to Die is still my favorite. I have two copies, one for me and one to loan to friends. If you go for the hardcover (the paperback cover is much more pedestrian) be sure to get one with the dust jacket! This has to be one of the all-time great pieces of cover art. Explosions, flames, a charging elephant, a semi-naked woman, bad guys packing AK-47s, completely naked people, a roaring lion, more AK-47s, the sun setting over the African mountains...you've just got to read the book!Having said that, A Time to Die completely lived up to my expectations. From the first safari scene to the final showdown with the terrorist guerillas, it's the kind of relentless battle for survival that can only take place in Africa. I'd have to agree that sometimes Smith's dialogue sounds a little stilted, particularly in the romantic scenes, but I never found it off-putting. Just because no woman has ever talked to me like that, doesn't mean they never talk that way! Some reviewers take offense at Smith's handling of racial issues. I don't know; put a white character and a black character together in a novel about Africa and somebody's bound to squeal racism. I figure Smith, as a South African, is a lot closer to the subject than I'll ever be, and I don't disregard his view just because he's white-that would be racist, wouldn't it? A Time to Die takes place in Zimbabwe and Mozambique when the wounds from those countries' vicious race wars were still bleeding. (And hey, they're still bleeding now. Anybody who's followed the ongoing racial and intertribal violence in Zimbabwe since Mugabe took over has to agree that Smith pegged the situation pretty accurately.) This is an African's tale of what Africa is, not an Western fantasy of what Africa ought to be. Sure, the bushman tracker Matatu is a subservient character, but so what? He frequently proves himself smarter than his "white master," and they both laugh about it. If all Smith's black characters were subservient, then I think you could go running to the NAACP, but throughout the book there's a complete spectrum of well-developed black characters, good and bad. Are these reviewers saying that no black African was ever subservient, or that no such character should ever be written so? I was more struck by the political correctness of their thinking than any racist content in the novel itself. Anyway, to my mind this is a great African adventure. Plenty of thrills, but still touching thoughtfully on the live nerve of African politics. I think you can follow a literary history of Africa from Hemingway through Robert Ruark to Wilbur Smith and be better entertained every step of the way. When I wrote my own novel of Africa, A Time to Die was one of my inspirations. -- Don Hollway, author of DANGEROUS GAME (ISBN 0741429497)
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Great action,
By A Customer
This review is from: A Time to Die (Mass Market Paperback)
Another great Courtney novel Mr. Smith!!! But you left us hanging on the,"cliff " so to speak. What happens with Sean and Claudia? Is there another adventure in the waiting or have I not read it?
3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
An excellent and exciting read!,
By A Customer
This review is from: A Time to Die (Mass Market Paperback)
Though I am really not a fan of adventure/action books, reading this novel was truly a stunning experience. Above all else though, it gave me an interest in Africa and all it's exotic intricacies.
4 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
incredible,
By A Customer
This review is from: A Time to Die (Mass Market Paperback)
a time to die;;;one of the most beautiful books i've ever read...i've read everyone of his books, some twice.....some even three times and it's always the same: overwhelming! i even went to africa for a month!!
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Time to Read!,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: A Time to Die (Mass Market Paperback)
It's no secret that I like Wilbur Smith and have read most of his books so I'm a little biased when it comes to writing this review. The guy knows how to write an always interesting adventure novel and maybe a little more than that since he writes great African politics and history, great edge of your proverbial seat thrillers, and reminds a lot of us how little we actually know of African policies and the kind of prejudice that has little to do with color but more often to do with historical and bitter tribal fueds, power grabs, and underlying economics. He also writes of great loyalties; something that few books offer up these days so it's five stars for A Time to Die for another great read.Nicely done, Wilbur.
5.0 out of 5 stars
More like a time to sit on the edge of the seat,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: A Time to Die (Kindle Edition)
If you are looking for a story that will keep you riveted to the edge of your seat, look no further. I won't even go into Smith's story telling abilities. He is simply one of the best story tellers period.This story takes place in war torn Mozambique mostly, and is the continuation of the Courtney adventures. Mostly this revolves around Sean, who is the grandson of the original Sean Courtney. Not as long as some of the other stories in this series, but at 530 pages it's a substantial tale. Smith's knowledge of the bush war in Southern Africa is extraordinary even though he was born in Rhodesia. His knowledge of the how things work in Africa still astounds me. He will take you to another world in an adventure few authors can tell. I am so exhausted from this book, I am going to have to read something lighter before I take on the next one in the series. How anybody could give this less than 5 stars, is beyond me. Perhaps they have not read the previous stories in the series. To say this is a worthwhile read is a huge understatement. If you have the gumption, read this book. You won't be disappointed.
4.0 out of 5 stars
End of the Line,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: A Time to Die (Mass Market Paperback)
This novel represents the last of the African series by time line and represents what happened to Africa after the colonists are finally evicted. Independence yes but poverty, bloodshed, and utter dispair.Makes you want to find a better solution to solving Africa's problems. This book gives a view that blacks and whites can coexist but choose not to and that once strong bonds between them can be lost in the name of justice. Maybe someday Wilbur Smith will be able to see an Africa healed of these injustices where blacks and whites can once again coexist as equals. |
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Time to Die, A by Wilbur Smith (Paperback - 2000)
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