Review: A Spear of Summer Grass
Title: A Spear of Summer Grass
Author: Deanna RaybournPublisher: Harlequin/Mira
Pub Date: April 30, 2013
How Acquired: Through Net Galley
What it’s About: The daughter of a scandalous mother, Delilah
Drummond is already notorious, even among Paris society. But her latest scandal
is big enough to make even her oft-married mother blanch. As punishment, Delilah
is exiled to Kenya and her favorite stepfather's savanna manor house,
Fairlight, until gossip subsides. Fairlight is the crumbling, sun-bleached
skeleton of a faded African dream, a world where dissolute expats are bolstered
by gin and jazz records, cigarettes and safaris. Against the frivolity of her
peers, Ryder White stands in sharp contrast. As foreign to Delilah as Africa,
Ryder becomes her guide to the complex beauty of this unknown world. Giraffes,
buffalo, lions and elephants roam the shores of Lake Wanyama amid swirls of red
dust. Here, life is lush and teeming—yet fleeting and often cheap.
Amidst the wonders—and dangers—of Africa, Delilah awakes to
a land out of all proportion: extremes of heat, darkness, beauty and joy that
cut to her very heart. Only when this sacred place is profaned by bloodshed
does Delilah discover what is truly worth fighting for—and what she can no
longer live without.
Why you should buy
it: I’ve been interested in
British Africa between the wars, ever since I saw the film White Mischief. So when I read that one of my favorite
writers, Deanna Raybourn, had a book coming out set in that time period, I
couldn’t wait to read it. I started the
book on Saturday on my bus ride to Boston and couldn’t put it down. From the moment that Delilah set her dainty
foot on African soil, I was completely mesmerized. I read it on the T, at dinner, during
intermission at the Lyric Stage Company, before bed, and kept on reading it
until I finished it on the bus ride back home to New York. And then I was depressed, because the book was
done and I had to say good-bye to Delilah and Ryder, two of the most
interesting characters that I have met in historical fiction in a long time. Not
even the knowledge that Raybourn has another book coming out set during the
same time period could assuage my grief. This book made me want to immediately book a
safari in Africa but the Abercrombie & Fitch kind with the air-conditioned
tents, and four star cuisine.
What can I say about Delilah Drummond that hasn’t already
been said by critics who have universally acclaimed A Spear of Summer Grass?
Delilah is spoiled, petulant, impulsive, promiscuous, vain, sarcastic,
intelligent, and too stubborn for her own good. It takes her forever to admit
what we, the reader already knows, that she has not only fallen in love with
Ryder White, but she has fallen head over heels in love with Africa. Oh, and I have mentioned that she is
fiendishly loyal to both ex-husbands and friends? There times when I wanted to throttle
Delilah, particularly when she is being beastly to her cousin Dodo. But as Delilah grew and changed, so did my
feelings towards her. Delilah is like an
onion, the book slowly peels back the layers to reveal the pain
underneath. Like many people, Delilah’s
life was marked by the First World War.
She’s been trying to mask the pain by dancing, drinking and shagging the
night away. By the time she does an impulsively heroic act towards the end of
the book, I wanted to be her best friend.
And then there is Ryder White. Be still my foolish heart, if it were
possible to marry a fictional character, I would want to marry Ryder
White. How can one resist a man who can
quote Walt Whitman? A man who can take down a lion with ease but who respects
nature, the land and the natives? A man who is also kind and generous as well
as being stubborn and proud? Ryder is a man’s man, handsome, brave and a little
rough around the edges (all those years living in the Yukon and Africa). He has been through a great deal of pain in
his life but he doesn’t let it define him. In fact, before you read Spear of Summer
Grass, I suggest you read Raybourn’s prequel novella Far in the Wilds for a
glimpse of Ryder before the novel starts. I guarantee you will fall just as madly in
love with Ryder as I have.
In fact, all the characters in this book are wonderfully flawed
and deliciously quirky, including Tusker, Ryder’s aunt, Kit, the promiscuous
self-absorbed artist, Rex and Helen, the long married couple with secrets, and Gideon
and Moses. I could gush all day about
the wonderful scenes between Gideon, a Masai warrior who becomes Delilah’s
protector and friend, and Delilah. All these
characters have suffered something whether it is loss of a loved one, or the
pain of being a spinster. It is Africa that
heals them, that gives purpose and meaning to their lives. Raybourn doesn’t shy away from describing just
how hard life in Africa was, how few modern conveniences, the tensions between
the colonialists and the natives, and the differing viewpoints on what
direction Kenya or British East Africa should go in. To the Europeans, Africa was their Wild West,
the final frontier. I do agree with some
reviewers who felt that the political situation in Kenya is rather glossed
over. I’m still a little unsure as to
what was going on at the time. And I’m
not sure that the novel needed a murder mystery. It occurred so late in the book, that the
denouement seemed rushed to me. The book
is at its best when the focus is on Delilah’s relationship with Africa, and her
developing relationship with Ryder.
At first when I was reading the book, I tried to imagine
what real life characters that lived in Kenya in the early 20th
century Raybourn might have based her characters on. After a while I was so entranced by the story,
that I started imagining what actors might play what roles in the miniseries
(please make this happen). I definitely
see Hayley Atwell (Captain America) as Delilah, Laura Carmichael (Lady Edith in
Downton Abbey) as Dodo and Judi Dench as Tusker. Who should play Ryder is the tricky one; I
would have said Clive Owen about ten years ago or even Russell Crowe when I
still liked him. If Jonathan Cake were a big enough star, I would say that he would make an excellent Ryder as would Richard Armitage, if he lightened his hair.
The verdict: A powerful and poignant novel about
redemption and the human spirit told by a master storyteller.
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