Hello. This will be the new home for over 800 book reviews that I have written between 1997 and the end of 2010. They used to be found at http://www.deadtreesreview.com/, but that site will be discontinued.

My newer reviews will be found at http://www.deadtreesreview.blogspot.com/.








Showing posts with label bacon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bacon. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 18, 2012

African Safari

African Safari, Eugen M. Bacon, Trafford Publishing, 2003

Julia Peters is an unemployed resident of present-day London. Her sister, Sandy, has suddenly joined the unemployed. Since they are the ones paying for their father's care in a nursing home, income needs to be found, immediately.

After nearly being raped at what Julia thought was an end-of-the-day job interview, she is saved by Blake Anderson, who has an office in the same building. Blake is tall, square-jawed and handsome, while Julia is young and gorgeous. He offers her a job as his personal assistant for the next several months. It involves living elsewhere for that period of time, and doing lots of word processing. Julia doesn't really have a choice, so she accepts. Then she finds out that they will be spending the next several months in Africa, specifically Tanzania, a place that Julia considers to be the middle of nowhere.

It helps when Blake pays Dad's nursing home bill for the next several months. Julia gets a quick education on African life at the airport in Nairobi, where the two are to meet (her luggage is stolen). Blake takes her on a cost-is-no-object shopping spree to replace her things, before they continue to Tanzania.

The place where they are to live could be compared to a mansion. It is maintained by a local husband and wife, who live on the premises. Blake and Julia soon get to work. He is a best-selling romance author, and she is his typist.

Julia doesn't know what to make of Blake. One day, he treats her like a queen, and the next day, he acts like a slave driver. Later, a woman named Karen stops by for a visit. One can almost see the claws and fangs growing between the two women. On his way to Mt. Kilimanjaro, where Karen owns a resort, Blake is carjacked and severely beaten. Julia rushes to his bedside. Blake later reveals that Karen is his overly protective step-sister. Julia also begins to realize that there is more to Africa than what meets the eye.

This book is quite good. It's a romance story (as you may have guessed) set in a part of the world unknown to most Westerners. It is also a good tale of cultural discovery. It is a fast read, and is worth checking out.