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In True at First Light the glory days of the "great white hunters" are over and the Mau Mau rebellion is violently dislodging European farmers from Kenya's arable lands. But to the African gun bearers, drivers, and game scouts who run his safari in the shadow of Mount Kilimanjaro, Hemingway remains a lordly figure--almost a god. Two parallel quests propel the narrative: Mary, Hemingway's fourth and last wife, doggedly stalks an enormous black-maned lion that she is determined to kill by Christmas, while Hemingway becomes increasingly obsessed with Debba, a beautiful young African woman. What makes the novel especially strange and compelling is that Mary knows all about Debba and accepts her as a "supplementary wife," even as she loses no opportunity to rake her husband over the coals for his drinking, lack of discipline in camp, and condescending protectiveness.
As usual with Hemingway, atmosphere and attitude are far more important than plot. Mary at one point berates her husband as a "conscience-ridden murderer", but this is precisely the moral stance that gives the hunting scenes their tension and beauty. "I was happy that before he died he had lain on the high yellow rounded mound with his tail down", Hemingway writes of "Mary's lion", "and his great paws comfortable before him and looked off across his country to the blue forest and the high white snows of the big Mountain."
Passages like these--and there are many of them-- redeem the book's rambling structure and occasional lapses into self- indulgent posturing. Joan Didion dismissed True at First Light in The New Yorker as "words set down but not yet written", but this fails to acknowledge the power of these words. The value of True at First Light lies in its candour, its nakedness: it provides a rare opportunity to watch a master working his way toward art. --David Laskin
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Book Description Hardcover. Condition: New. Dust Jacket Condition: New. 1st Edition. 319 PAGES, 1999, Seller Inventory # 028504
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Book Description Quarter Cloth. Condition: New. Dust Jacket Condition: New. First Edition. New York, NY, Scribner, 1999. First edition. 8vo. Black quarter cloth over dark green boards with gilt lettering on spine, 319 pp. Both a revealing self-portrait and a dramatic fictional chronicle of his final African safari, this is Ernest Hemingway's last unpublished work, written when he returned from Kenya in 1953. It was edited by his son, Patrick, whom accompanied Hemingway on safari and offers rare insights into the legendary writer. New, in a new dust jacket, protected by a mylar cover. Seller Inventory # EM-B1193-02
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Book Description Hardcover. Condition: NEW CONDITION. Dust Jacket Condition: NEW DUST JACKET. First Edition, First Printing. // NO REMAINDER MARK// one small number neatly written on the first fixed end paper // NOT PRICE CLIPPED// NEW MYLAR COVER// full number line including the "1" //. Seller Inventory # 032585