This book came out in 1966, was the author's third to be published, and the second to deal with the Courtney brothers Sean and Garrick. Although once again Sean takes over the story, Garrick is still involved here and there, usually with evil thoughts and actions towards Sean.
We find Sean out in the bush four years after the end of When The Lion Feeds. He and his group are returning from hunting ivory (thank goodness we were all spared the descriptions of shooting elephants this time) and everyone is dreaming of the riches to be had once they get to town and sell their goods.
But the drums of war are beating in town. Sean had no idea of this new situation, and it will change everything for him. The Boer War is not one I knew much about, but that is the war we all fight in this book, Sean most of all. It was bloody, ruthless, and there was much needless waste of life, as there is in all wars.
This conflict lasted from 1899 to 1902. There were commandos, guerrilla warfare, and the use of a scorched earth policy in which Boer wives and children were placed in internment camps and Boer homesteads burned to the ground.
Besides dealing with all of this, Sean also has to face the ongoing tension with his brother, and the problems caused by his own son Dirk, who seems to have a streak of pure evil in him. Garrick's son Michael is part of the picture as well. Why does he seem so much more like Sean than Dirk?! An interesting little puzzle, that.
One thing that I noticed with this book is that at this time Smith still did not seem to be able to blend his characters into the story in such a way that they were all involved. We lose sight of this one for most of the book, that one shows up once in awhile, and the other one is just a thought here and there.
For example Michael, Garrick Courtney's son. He is a part of this story, and contributes unwittingly to Dirk's wickedness, but he is mostly in the background as far as character development. Yet in Book #4, The Burning Shore (1985), he is described (by Sean) as having an essential weakness in him which requires that he have a strong woman at his side. There was never a sign of that in this book, but then we didn't really get to know him at all. So I imagined at the end here that I would see something more of Michael's life in book #3, A Sparrow Falls, which I have already begun reading.
Overall thoughts on this book: still a good dramatic story, more depth to it than the first book, and Smith is showing his progress as a writer. But it was very easy to see the future pattern in plot concept. He will tend to repeat basic experiences for his characters, giving them a tweak here and there. I guess I should have saved 4,5, and 6 until after these first three. I would not have been comparing current and future books that way. Really not a fair thing for me to do!