I’m not sure if I’ve ever read a Wilbur Smith book before. Probably, yes – way back in my twenties maybe. But from what I understand, I don’t think “Gold Mine” is the best example of his oeuvre. It’s set in Africa, sure – with strong, hard, powerful men and sexy, swooning women. Avoidance of prickly racial politics, with the “natives” treated mostly as noble, brutish savages. But (from what little I know of his work), “Gold Mine” is relatively short and sweet, set only across a few months, not a sprawling multi-generation epic, relatively few main characters. I quite enjoyed it – a easy read. I learned quite a bit about industrial-level gold mining in the late 60s – sometimes the background exposition gets a bit too documentary-teachery, but for the most part it’s woven into the industrial espionage thriller plot (which, amazingly, was stolen by the Dreamworks movie "Antz" decades later!). Probably the main reason I ended up with this book in my possession is that this edition (retitled “Gold”) was a film tie-in cover featuring Bond-era Roger Moore. Despite my obsessive attraction for film novelizations/tie-ins, I won’t be re-reading this/keeping it on my bookshelf. It was fine though. Dated, sexist and racist, sure, mostly in a time-capsule way. And the Bond comparison goes further than casting Dodgy Rog as the lead in the film version. The central villain plot wouldn’t be out of place in a Fleming-era Bond novel, with the villainous, world-destabilising cabal approximating Fleming’s versions of Drax or Goldfinger. Although Gold Mine seems positively progressive compared to the sexism/racism/sadism of Fleming’s Bond. Rodney Ironsides is less pompous and snobby than 007, more of a blue-collar, rough-hands, testosterone-leaking version, a REAL MAN – and reading the book I found it difficult to imagine refined, almost-effeminate Roger Moore as the character (I’m guessing he took it to “toughen up” his image). I’ll watch the film if it crosses my path, out of curiosity, but I won’t be seeking it out. The book is fine, it moves at a cracking pace, with interesting settings and predictable yet satisfying resolutions for all the main characters. I like Wilbur Smith’s style well enough, so maybe one day I’ll pick up one of his more traditional books. Not in a hurry though.
7/10