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Stuart Cloete (1897–1976)

Author of Rags of Glory

49+ Works 537 Members 8 Reviews

About the Author

Includes the names: Cloete Stuart, Stuart Cleote

Works by Stuart Cloete

Rags of Glory (1963) 85 copies
The turning wheels (1937) 61 copies
The Fiercest Heart (1960) 49 copies
Congo song (1943) 43 copies
The Abductors (1966) 34 copies
The curve and the tusk (1952) 25 copies
Hill of Doves (1941) 22 copies
The African Giant (1955) 20 copies
Watch for the dawn (1939) 17 copies
A Victorian Son (1656) 15 copies
The mask (1957) 15 copies
Mamba (1967) 10 copies
Gazella (1958) 10 copies
African Portraits (1946) 9 copies
Against These Three (1945) 8 copies
Silver Trumpet (1960) 4 copies
Honey Bird (1964) 4 copies
The Soldier's Peaches (1959) 4 copies
Balada Africana (1959) 2 copies
Three White Swans (1971) 2 copies
Chetoko (1976) 2 copies
Wetterleuchten (1955) 1 copy
FIERCEST HEAERT,THE (1960) 1 copy
Naamio 1 copy
Yesterday is dead, (1940) 1 copy
The third way (1947) 1 copy
Canary pie (1976) 1 copy
The Blast 1 copy

Associated Works

She (1886) — Introduction, some editions — 2,933 copies
Great Short Stories of the World (1965) — Contributor — 26 copies
The Wonderful World of Horses (1966) — Contributor — 22 copies
Celebrating Christmas Around the World (1962) — Contributor — 20 copies
Gentle Like a Cyclone: Stories of Horses and Their Riders (1974) — Contributor — 19 copies
The Girls from Esquire (1952) — Contributor — 18 copies
The Illustrated Book about Africa (1959) — Introduction — 10 copies

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Two Deserters from the British Army join the Great trek of the boers into the Orange Free State. They fight the Zulus, and the nice one finds love. Pretty racist, by modern standards.
 
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DinadansFriend | 2 other reviews | Mar 10, 2024 |
 
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oirm42 | May 24, 2018 |
I grabbed my copy of The Abductors by Stuart Cloete (1966) from a friend's garage sale six years ago and then let it mellow on the shelf for awhile before digging in. The pulpy cover and salacious description ("Once a girl is a whore, my dear, there's no going back") looked fun, but the book itself is actually quite long (479 pages, with tiny type) and includes an educational appendix on Cloete's research into the continued problem of women being tricked or sold into prostitution. Which, you know, hasn't really gotten much better since the 1880s, when this book is set, or the 1960s, when it was written. While the combination of a titillating plot and an educational backbone don't always work well together, the author balances the two well and also throws in some excellent characterization, observant description, and clever twists. This is a fun book to read and is much zippier than its length and appendices and works cited lists would make you think. I could have done with a few less rich dudes comparing women to horses and sometimes Lavinia's awakening to equal rights and sexual pleasure is a little hamfisted, but that's easy to forgive in a novel with so much unexpected depth and character. Worth picking up at a garage sale near you!

[full review here: http://spacebeer.blogspot.com/2016/09/the-abductors-by-stuart-cloete-1966.html ]
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½
 
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kristykay22 | Sep 5, 2016 |
The Fiercest Heart by Stuart Cloete is a story of the Boers who trekked north from the South African Cape into unknown lands in order to live free of the British yoke that had been tightening around them. In this story they were trekking from the eastern Cape and their journey led them through an area that would eventually become known as Lestho. The history of Lestho is entwined with the Boers. Originally called Basutoland, some of the Boers settled in the Western Highlands of this country. As the natives waged war alternately with the British and the Dutch, the Boer colony went through both peaceful times and times of war. Eventually the King of Basutoland made peace with Queen Victoria. The British promptly signed a treaty with the Dutch and allowed them to hold a portion of Basutoland and include it as part of their Orange Free State. Of course once gold was found in Kimberly, the Orange Free State attracted the attention of the British once again.

Set in the 1830’s, the main character in The Fiercest Heart is Francina, a young Boer girl who, with her grandmother Tante Maria and granduncle, Oom Willem Prinsloo, become voortrekkers and leave behind their farm and comfortable lifestyle to trek uncountable miles through unchartered wildlands with about six other families. They are searching for a place where they can settle and live without Britain‘s laws and taxes. Before they reach a safe haven they have to face warlike Zulus, wildlife, flood and fire.

This was a very popular book when it was originally published in the early 1960’s, a movie was made as well. I had originally read this book while in my teens and remembered it quite favourably. Unfortunately, I probably should have left this one buried in the mists of time as today, the sexism and male hubris is difficult to swallow and I had to force myself through to the end of the book. There was less plot and more heaving chests than I remembered and I would have liked both the male and the female characters to have been developed more than the stereotypic identities that the author gave them.
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DeltaQueen50 | 2 other reviews | Jul 12, 2015 |

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Works
49
Also by
13
Members
537
Popularity
#46,380
Rating
½ 3.4
Reviews
8
ISBNs
65
Languages
2

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