If there were more than 5 stars, I'd give all to this book. it is by far my favourite book.
A Man Cannot Cry by Gloria Keverne is a multi-cultural epic, set in southern Africa, that tells the story of a young white doctor, Than Profane. After the death of his father in the land formerly known as Rhodesia (now Zambia), he settles among the quaker missionaries. Among these is his father's widow, nearly the same age as Than and a blind girl he falls in love with.
The story took Gloria Keverne 20 years to research and the result is a 610-page masterpiece that weaves together the lives, hopes and beliefs of both the western missionaries and the African natives, and the one man who affected both sides. The incredible depth of her protagonist's character is sure to capture readers' minds.
Here's a quote from the book that left me breathless with admiration for Gloria craftmanship:
"For suddenly, sillently as shadow, Than Profane was among them, materializing out of darkness and panic as seraphically alluring as the son of God. In all that hot havoc, he had a stabilising presence as solid as rock, the solemn sunburnt face ballasted with a tranquil strength, his bare sweat-glazed torso looking like some tall copper hewn statue, standing in odd tribute to himself."
(Gloria Keverne, A Man Cannot Cry)
I don't know how many times I've read that passage, but it always gives me goosebumps. This is my absolute all-time favourite book; a definite must read (no, you can't borrow my copy - don't trust you to bring it back).