This is the second novel out of a 50 novel H. Rider Haggard omnibus that I've read on my kindle. I probably won't be reading any more. I know that Haggard was a product of his time, but I'm not going to be able to stomach another of these novels that are so full of racist, paternalistic, misogynistic, and wealth-privileged themes. I know that people talk about how Haggard was ahead of his time, in how he portrayed non-white races as heroes (but of course still in the shadow of his main characters), but it doesn't change the fact that the word 'savage' is used to describe the natives of Africa in this story many dozens of times, and it becomes wearying for me. Haggard's narrow, parochial view bleeds through every paragraph in this stilted, overly verbose tale. Nor am I well disposed towards Quartermain's character, since he is a big game hunter of the shoot first and mount them on the wall variety. One of the major scenes that I hated involved the initial meeting of Quartermain's party with the fabled white race of Africa, in which he and his big men shoot a family of tame hippopotami in an effort to impress the natives with their power. This apparently only pisses of the priests, since the queens, and all the other people defend their actions almost immediately because, well, they are great white hunters or something. The depictions of the women is also embarrassing. The powerful queen, leader of her people, in at least 4 scenes, stamps her feet, which essentially renders the queen as little more then a petulant child.
Then there is the assumption that Christianity is the one true religion, which given my dislike of religion in general, and that one in particular, rubs me the wrong way. And it is saturated throughout the novel. Not unexpected, but a constant irritant. At the very end of the novel, Henry Curtis, one of the surviving members of Quartermain's party, talks about how he wants to protect the Zu-Vendi from the outside world to protect their noble barbarianism from corrupting influences such as telegraphs, steam, and universal suffrage, but just a paragraph before that, he expresses his intent to eradicate their existing priesthood and replace it with the One True Religion, and oh yeah, put them under a strong central government. Holy fuck.
But let me step back from all that. Take away all the bad, and what am I left with? Well, an adventure novel that is wordy, tedious, long, and ultimately dreadfully boring.