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Congo Song

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It is September, 1939. The Germans have just marched into Poland, and von Brandt is about to put into execution his schemes of sabotage. Against this fantastic background, to the sound of the Congo drums there is played a drama of life and death in which the graceful sophistication of the over-civilized is set in counterpoint to tropic lust and savagery

399 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1943

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About the author

Stuart Cloete

68 books9 followers
Stuart Cloete was born in France in 1897 to a Scottish mother and South African father. (His ancestors had come from Holland with Jan Van Riebeck to establish a settlement for the Dutch East India Company).
He remembered his early years in Paris with nostalgia, but the ideal was shattered when he began his schooling in France and England. He never excelled academically and - in his own words - ‘learnt almost nothing'.

At the age of 17 he was commissioned as a Second Lieutenant (at the beginning of the First World War in 1914) into the Ninth King's Own Yorkshire Light Infantry, before later transferring to the Coldstream Guards. While nearly all of his early fellow officers and friends died, he survived four years of fighting in France and, for a while, was treated like a living lucky charm by the troops. He was seriously injured twice, and experienced amnesia induced by ‘shell-shock' which was largely left untreated. In a mental hospital in London, he met his first wife, a volunteer nurse, Eileen Horsman, and fell in love, even inducing a second breakdown with aspirin and whisky so he could see her again.

After recuperating in France, Cloete acted on his compulsion to identify with the land of his ancestors. He became a successful farmer in the Transvaal in South Africa. But as soon as he had established himself and achieved his aims he became restless again and began pondering a life as a writer. His eighteen year marriage floundered through growing incompatibility and Cloete's infidelity.

He sold up and left for England to become an author, leaving Eileen behind in South Africa. He recalled the decision to become a writer as the biggest gamble of his life. But, as it turned out, he hit the jackpot with his first novel, Turning Wheels, published in 1937. It sold more than two million copies, although it was banned in South Africa where it scandalized the authorities with its commentary on the Great Trek and a mixed-race relationship. Cloete was a prolific writer and went on to complete 14 novels and at least eight volumes of short stories.

On the way to America to promote Turning Wheels, Cloete met Tiny ( Mildred Elizabeth West) who later became his second wife. It was not love at first sight but eventually he realized he had found a soul mate. Tiny enjoyed the fruits of his success as a highly acclaimed writer and was his faithful companion until his death in Cape Town in 1976.

Cloete lived through a period of unprecedented upheavals and in his autobiography, published in the early 70s, he pondered whether ‘progress' was in fact a misnomer; it had ushered in colorless uniformity and even the threat of nuclear war. He also reflected on the chapters of his vagabond, eventful and, in his view, incredibly lucky life. He left behind no children.

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Profile Image for Roger.
204 reviews11 followers
March 23, 2021
This novel takes place in Africa at the beginning of World War II. It briefly (a few months in 400 pages) follows the lives of several interesting characters, primarily men surrounding one eccentric but beautiful woman, the wife of a scientist. They include a Nazi ostensibly there to capture wild animals; an elderly doctor who philosophizes much; a temperamental artist; a British hunter / storekeeper keeping an eye on the Nazi; and a divorced American sent to help the British spy. Of course the American falls in love with the woman, as just about everyone else already has. The woman keeps a pet gorilla (possibly to keep the men in check) and a pet snake to keep the gorilla in check.
Some details will have younger readers crying racism and misogyny, especially on the part of the artist who purchased his two African wives from their father; I might have rated it one star less for that but cut it slack for the time it was written in, and the setting.
Surprisingly good.
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