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Some Roman once said that there is always something new coming out of
Africa, but in crime literature that has not been too true until
recently. Back in the 1960s, after their expulsion from South Africa,
Tom Sharpe and James McClure both returned to that unhappy country for
some or near-all of their work, but – McClure particularly and
unfortunately – never got around to dealing with the post-apartheid
South Africa. Now Deon Meyer, who writes in Afrikaans but has contracts
all around the world, is bringing us up to date. Blood Safari is his
fifth thriller to appear in English. Though he is new to me, when I
checked out his other titles on Amazon, I learned that readers who liked
Meyer also bought Lee Child. That means readers with taste who were one
step ahead of me.
In the world of Deon Meyer it is not unusual that others are one step
ahead. Fortunately, I am just a reader, and a foreigner, because it
would mean, confusion and pain for me, suffering for others. And
heartbreak for South Africa. In the chasing, thundering,
misunderstanding world of a man such as Lemmer – he does not use his
first name, there are things for which he has no use – a man who wants
to do right, a man who in his job as a bodyguard, wants not just to be
close to the body he has to guard, but to forestall hurt to that body if
he can work out where the danger might come from – in that world, he
will never be in a position to know, because the powers that be and the
powers that want to be will always be one step ahead. So much ahead that
Lemmer and his client – orphan heiress Emma Le Roux – will never know
where or who they are.
Blood Safari takes Emma Le Roux on a hunt for her missing brother up
country to the big game parks, where a few people with spirit are
striving to save the land and its wildlife, and where their opposition
might be large corporations, but could equally be the native peoples who
want their original farmland back. Lemmer, who we learn has something to
expiate in his life, finds it difficult to trust the police, now with
black officers who might be sympathetic to tribes people, though Lemmer
admits to we readers he has a background that makes him a natural
suspect anyway. An unfortunate connection with a couple of plain clothes
police officers does not make Lemmer’s relationship with the police any
easier. The connection is fist and head.
Deon Meyer does not have a series protagonist, though the principals in
each book share a lot of characteristics. Gradually, Lemmer manages to
work out why his opponents are ahead of him. He has a more difficult job
of making sense of Emma Le Roux, her missing brother/found brother, and
the other bodies on the way, but that too works itself out. I was a
little disappointed that this was done with an info dump lasting several
pages, which also brings in some real political history – it gave the
end of the book a rushed feel – but I could see why those Amazon readers
who liked Lee Child have been reading Deon Meyer, too. I expect to join
them.
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