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White Hunters: The Golden Age of African Safaris » (Unabridged, 1 MP3-CD, 14.5 Hrs.)

Book cover image of White Hunters: The Golden Age of African Safaris by Brian Herne

Authors: Brian Herne, Robert Whitfield
ISBN-13: 9780786101474, ISBN-10: 0786101474
Format: MP3 on CD
Publisher: Blackstone Audio, Inc.
Date Published: August 2007
Edition: Unabridged, 1 MP3-CD, 14.5 Hrs.

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Author Biography: Brian Herne

Brian Herne, formerly a professional hunter, founded the international professional hunters' magazine Track, and has written for numerous magazines, including Outdoor Life, Petersen's Hunting, Safari Times, and African Life. He lives in San Diego, California.

Book Synopsis

East Africa affects our imagination like few other places: The sight of a charging rhino goes directly to the heart; the limitless landscape of bony highlands, desert, and mountain is of "unequalled nobility," writes Dinessen. The adventures recorded here lasted only seventy years but include the legendary big-game safaris led by Selous and Bell; early hunters who by necessity were explorers; the Hill cousins, J. A. Hunter and Ionides; Cape-to-Cairo Grogan, who walked 4,000 miles for the love of a woman; Bror Von Blixen and the romantic Denys Finch. Their exploits inspired Hemingway's stories and movies with Clark Gable and Gregory Peck. Animal lovers, these hunters were the first conservationists, witnesses to the richest wildlife spectacle the earth has ever known.

Brian Herne, formerly a professional hunter and one of the few awarded the Shaw and Hunter Trophy, evokes the harmony that existed between hunters and big game before poaching and politics intervened. White Hunters summons adventure, danger, and romance on a grand scale.

Salon - Scott Sutherland

On May 20, 1977, the government of Kenya banned big-game hunting in an attempt, the official line went, to preserve the wildlife that had become a major tourist draw. No more rifles, Nairobi said; from now on, Kenyan safaris would be conducted with binoculars and cameras.

The '70s were an overdue period of environmental consciousness-raising throughout the Western world, and to most Americans and Europeans the edict from Kenya was welcome. But the news from Africa is rarely as clear-cut as it first appears. As Brian Herne argues in White Hunters, the real threat to Kenyan wildlife lay in poaching, which was widespread, indiscriminate and often conducted with the help of corrupt Kenyan game officials. The conservation-minded big game hunters were an easy target, though, and the hunting ban, still in place, abruptly ended a colorful if somewhat blood-spattered period of East African history.

The demise of big game hunting in Kenya -- and in the Sudan, Uganda, Tanzania and Zaire -- occupies the final chapters of Herne's book, but it's a shame he didn't make it his primary subject. Herne, a second-generation Kenyan and himself a professional or "white" hunter (so called because virtually all of them were of European descent) for 30 years, might have injected his tale with a host of compelling post-Colonial story lines and told it from the perspective of an active participant -- but he does not. Instead he offers an exhaustive social history of the professional (and largely Anglo) hunting fraternity, from its Victorian beginnings to its heyday in the '50s, '60s and '70s. Vivid tales of cunning, bravery and foolhardiness abound, but Herne, apparently intent on historical completeness, goes on burnishing the legend long after it has achieved peak elegiac glow. Of the book's 49 chapters, it's the final two, with an accompanying epilogue, that resonate most deeply.

Still, many of Herne's anecdotes of life on safari stalking the Big Five -- lion, leopard, rhino, buffalo and elephant -- are spellbinding, as when 1960s-era white hunter Ian MacDonald confronts a wounded leopard:

The big cat immediately went for Ian's throat ... He swore and cussed and attacked the growling cat with his bare hands, grabbing it by the throat as [the leopard's] jaws locked on his forearm ... Somehow he got the cat in an armlock stranglehold, hoping to choke it, but the cat went berserk and broke free, sinking its fangs into Ian's arm ... As the battle raged, Ian punched the leopard and the two thrashed about in a bloody melee. A shredded dew claw from Ian's first shotgun blast ... hooked into the white of MacDonald's left eye...

And so forth. MacDonald's Masai tracker eventually rushed in to dispatch the cat with a machete blow to the back; the hunter, stitched up in a Nairobi hospital, was back in the bush in less than a month.

Herne isn't the least bit interested in analyzing his bwanas' sense of entitlement. He prefers to pepper his tales of bloody derring-do with amusing stories of the rich and famous on safari, notably their sexual entanglements: "Even when [Edward, Prince of Wales] was on safari his attention was easily diverted by female company. At Dodoma...the prince disappeared into the night with the wife of a junior official, then turned up several hours late for a formal dinner."

Aside from occasional nuggets, though -- such as Queen Victoria's bestowing Mount Kilimanjaro upon Kaiser Wilhelm for his birthday, the 1920s practice of treating the dreaded blackwater fever with massive ingestions of champagne, white hunters' role in the bloody Mau Mau uprisings of the 1950s -- the profiles that make up the vast midsection of Herne's book follow a predictable pattern: A notable white hunter is introduced and his various qualities listed; he goes on safari with a rich or famous client, who inevitably botches the kill; the quarry flees into a thicket, with the white hunter hot on its tracks; the beast, wounded and royally pissed off, launches a surprise counterattack and proceeds to maul, horn, tusk, eviscerate or otherwise distress the hunter, who desires only to put it out of its misery. Most of these encounters end with the survival of the hunter. A few, in spectacularly gruesome fashion, do not.

Herne traces the history of the hunters' conservation efforts, making a strong case at the close for the return of hunter-influenced game management in East Africa, where over the past three decades poachers armed with military assault rifles have decimated the game population. "The simple uncontrovertible fact is that in countries with a per capita income of a few hundred dollars a year, there is little hope for the rhinoceros when the current price fetched by its horn is more than $30,000 per pound," Herne concludes. Of East Africa and the golden age of safaris, he asks, "Paradise lost? Perhaps." After the final chapters of White Hunters, though, that "perhaps" seems like a vastly over-optimistic answer.

Table of Contents

1The First White Hunters3
2Nairobi, Wild West Town15
3Hunter on the Lunatic Express26
4Flash Jack and the King32
5Yankees on Safari38
6The Hunter's Hunter50
7Funga Safari!60
8The Element of Style71
9A White Hunter Called Black78
10The Short Mysterious Life of Fritz Schindelar87
11War Clouds on the Equator94
12Frontiersman in Africa104
13The Honorable Bedar109
14Baron of the Bundu115
15The Royal Safaris131
16Trailblazers of the Twenties140
17Syd Downey and the Masai Mara149
18Wardens, Lions, and Snakes158
19A Wartime Alliance166
20Safariland174
21On Safari Again180
22Heroes of the Silver Screen187
23Lunan's White Hunters194
24The Tanganyika Hunters201
25The Moth and the Flame211
26Clary's World Record220
27The Enemy Within225
28The Hassans of Mombasa233
29African Odyssey242
30The Message of Mau Mau248
31Hearts of Darkness259
32The Bamboo Badlands265
33Out of the Forest, Into the Bush273
34The Maharajah of Mayhem280
35A Tale of Two Hunters292
36The Wanderings of an Officer and a Gentleman300
37King of the Catchers310
38Deadly Lion Hunt315
39Knife Fight with a Leopard325
40The Big Six333
41A Date with Destiny336
42The Prince of Pranksters345
43Keeper of the Flame350
44Pelizzoli's Promised Land359
45Uganda, Pearl of Africa366
46Company of Adventurers375
47Have Gun Will Travel383
48The Emperor and the Prince389
49Onward Passages396
Epilogue: A Race Against Time409
Source Notes417
Bibliography431
Acknowledgments441
Photographic Credits449
Index451

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