A very strange book that left me, in many ways, quite ambivalent about the lead characters, although I wanted to find out what happened to them, and I could not really put the book down. This is a trip into the dark heart of South Africa, a heart that is still recovering from the ravages of apartheid, and the struggle for liberation that ensued. It is also a thriller and a morality tale, dealing with the lives of Mace Bishop, a security consultant whose wife Oumou has been murdered, and Sheemina February, a suspected apartheid agent who was tortured in the Angolan camps. It is also about the sale of a weapons system to the South African government by Magnus Oosthuizen, who worked with the notorious (and really existing) assassination unit based at Vlakplaas, and a scientist who turns out to be a Serbian war criminal. There is also Silas and Veronica Dinsmor, a Native American couple, who want to set up a series of casinos in South Africa. As they all plot and scheme, they unleash between them a general and lethal nastiness.
This book has left me uneasy because I am dubious about the politics. It is in many ways a South African version of the "Bourne" books, and that left me wondering so many things. Why was the hero a white man? Even though that hero took up arms for the ANC, it left me wondering. Then, of course, there is the whole issue of what happened in the camps. There is not doubt that what happened was extremely bad, because Oliver Tambo intervened to out a stop to it, and publicly said that this was not acceptable. But I do not know if the allegations in the book against unnamed but current leaders are true. I am left very uneasy about the politics.
As a thriller, however, it works. If it was not so inappropriate, I could say that "hard-boiled noir" has come to South Africa. I can say, however, that this is a book in the Wilbur Smith tradition, with a dash of Deon Meyer for flavouring.