Nelson who?
Michael Stanley rated James McClure's The Song Dog (1991) one of the ten best African crime novels. I'd rank it behind The Gooseberry Fool among the four of McClure's South African-set Kramer and Zondi mysteries that I've read, but it contains some good, bracing stuff. Among the highlights:"`Listen,' said Kramer, certain he had heard somewhere it was better for a bloke to be allowed to express his deep feelings than to suppress them, `get up off your fat arse, hey, and help me go get this bloody animal!'"
"Then, all of a sudden, the crowd had parted of its own volition, and through it had come a coon version of Frank Sinatra making with the jaunty walk. The snap-brim hat, padded shoulders, and zootsuit larded with glinting thread were all secondhand ideas from a secondhand shop. Yet with them went the feeling that here was an original, even if someone, somewhere else, had thought it all up before."
(In a late-breaking bulletin from Stanley Trollip, the answer is no, the names are coincidental.)
***
Read James McClure's obituary and browse a list of his books.
© Peter Rozovsky 2010
Labels: Africa, James McClure, Kramer and Zondi, Michael Sears, Michael Stanley, South Africa, Stanley Trollip, The Gooseberry Fool, The Song Dog

2 Comments:
Mind if I include the link to this today.
Not at all. Thanks for asking.
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