I remember when I found "Musungu Jim..." on a shelf in a bookstore. I immediately liked the book and the author, actually I have loved them ever since.
Neat is a complex and wise writer on one hand and an interesting and great story teller on the other hand.
In this book we see the highly advanced phase of English-African relations, a clinch of cultures, often deadly. Yet there is ever present background hope that things should resolve somehow. That hope is present in all the books of the trilogy, so powerful in the first book and so elegiac in the third one.
But Neat's trilogy is not only about Africa. He examines the structure of the myths, creating myths of his own as well as his complex, interwoven streams of stories, since one of the central points of Neat's mythology is certain hyper-connectedness of people, events...
I need to find more writings of his.