The Big Footprints
by Hammond Innes
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London journalist Colin Tait reviews the conflict between Alex Kirby-Smith, an experienced hunter with a government contract to thin out the elephant herds to provide meat for starving tribes, and Cornelius van Delden, who is determined to save the herds.Tags
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Easily the least impressive example I have yet read of Hamilton Innes' work. It meanders, especially at the start. There is little focus. The characterization is hazy at best. And the story simply cannot get itself started. Even the title, The Big Footprints, is an awkward failure. Innes' motivation for the novel was his 1972 trip to Lake Rudolf (now, Lake Turkana) in Kenya, where he became obsessed with the mindless slaughter of African elephants, which threatened their extinction. It's a laudable cause. But Innes sacrificed his usual storytelling skills in a fevered attempt to convince his readers of the rightness of his theme: saving elephants, stopping poachers, and ending the trade in ivory. As a result this work languishes, almost show more forgotten.
There are a couple of good moments. The escape up Mt. Kulal and through its gorge is memorable. For a few pages, it seems that Innes might save his story. But things quickly ebb back into meaningless speculations about the abilities and motives of elephants. Telepathy? Really? His protagonist, Colin Tait, is hardly worth mentioning, so little does he have an effect on things. Only his escape, along with that of American cameraman Abe Finkel and Mary Delden, the daughter of an aging conservationist intent on saving the elephants at all costs, whether by sabotage or killing his opponents, carries the usual Innes stamp. Their struggle against the wilds of desert and drought make for a few thrilling pages as well. show less
There are a couple of good moments. The escape up Mt. Kulal and through its gorge is memorable. For a few pages, it seems that Innes might save his story. But things quickly ebb back into meaningless speculations about the abilities and motives of elephants. Telepathy? Really? His protagonist, Colin Tait, is hardly worth mentioning, so little does he have an effect on things. Only his escape, along with that of American cameraman Abe Finkel and Mary Delden, the daughter of an aging conservationist intent on saving the elephants at all costs, whether by sabotage or killing his opponents, carries the usual Innes stamp. Their struggle against the wilds of desert and drought make for a few thrilling pages as well. show less
Colin Tait, een jonge Engelse journalist, komt in het bezit van een manuscript van Pieter van Delden, met daarin een merkwaardige kaart van het grensgebied tussen Ethiopiƫ en Kenia. De kaart suggereert een onbekende beschaving in het natuurreservaat rond het berggebied van Porr. Colin, vast van plan hier een geweldige reportage van te maken, raakt echter in heel andere verwikkelingen verzeild. In Nairobi ontmoet Colin tijdens een conferentie over de wildstand Mary van Delden. Deze vertelt hem dat haar vader, dierenbeschermer Cornelius van Delden, de toegang tot Kenia is ontzegd. Toch weet Cornelius door te dringen tot de conferentie en hij neemt Colin en Mary mee naar de Serengeti-vlakte. Daar blijkt dat een enorme uitroeiing show more plaatsvindt onder het wild en vooral onder de olifanten. De slachting wordt uitgevoerd door Alex Kirby-Smith in opdracht van de Keniase regering, die dit verborgen wil houden. Van Delden blijft zich verzetten tegen de grote slachting die Kirby-Smith aanricht onder 'zijn' olifanten. Een harde confrontatie tussen deze rivalen kan niet uitblijven. En Colin en Mary zitten daar precies tussenin! show less
Mar 26, 2025Dutch
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Author Ralph Hammond Innes was born in Horsham, England on July 15, 1914. He attended Cranbrook School in Kent, but left in 1931 to work as a journalist. He published his first novel, The Doppelganger, in 1937. During World War II, he served in the Royal Artillery and published a number of books. In 1946, he became a full-time writer and wrote show more over thirty novels, children's books, and travel books throughout his career. He published children's books under the pseudonym Ralph Hammond until 1953. Four of his novels were made into films. He was awarded a C.B.E. (Commander, Order of the British Empire) in 1978 and received the Bouchercon Lifetime Achievement award in 1993. He died on June 10, 1998 and left a bulk of his estate to the Assoication of Sea Training Organisations. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
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Common Knowledge
- Canonical title*
- De stora spƄren
- Original publication date
- 1977
*Some information comes from Common Knowledge in other languages. Click "Edit" for more information.
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