Wednesday, June 10, 2020

Reviews of The Last Rhino

Rhino Reviews and Comments



-  This book has a bit of a mystery in it and a lot of adventure. It is well written and an engaging read. What struck me most, however, was that it is about the real Africa. Judging from the “About the Author” page it makes sense that this would be a story about the authentic Africa told with intelligence and knowledge. Robert Gribbin has spent much of his life in Africa and this came shining through.

The book helps you to see, feel and understand Africa. (At times the descriptions make you feel as if you can also hear and smell it as well.) It describes some of the true ravages of the Lord’s Resistance movement and the complexities of environmentalism on this continent. The characters are well drawn, there are strong women and sensitive men and also conniving politicians. It captures the dialogues and motives of real people one would meet in Africa today. There are people wanting to give back to society and others intent on destroying the wildlife in it.

Make no mistake that this is a novel. It is a compelling read for the plot alone, but the reader feels as if they are learning things about Africa and about life as they are enjoying the story. If I were teaching a course on Africa I would assign this as a very enjoyable text for my students. One that is also accurate and enlightening.

This book exceeded my expectations on three levels: it is an intelligent look at conservationism as it works in Africa today; it is a realistic, accurate view of contemporary Africa; and it is an engaging well-written novel with bits of wisdom throughout. An excellent read. I highly recommend The Last Rhino by Robert Gribbin. Debbie Jones



- Wanted you to know thatI have just finished the printed version of The Last Rhino and enjoyed reading it again very much. You have filled in the details nicely. I particularly enjoyed the way you inserted many interesting, and well-explained, points of natural history. Your story of the ornithologist was right on. I was not only sworn to secrecy but had to sign five different documents legally binding me to that oath.

There are two points of ornithology that could be corrected in the next edition. The Lilac-breasted Roller does not actually sing, it just makes an awkward sort of series of dry rasps that develops into a harsh rattle. And the Pied Kingfisher is a black and white bird with a black beak. The kingfisher with an orange beak is the Malachite Kingfisher. But those quibbles aside, what a wonderful book. I hope it gets wide distribution, and I hope it inspires you to keep writing. Alan Johnston



- I really enjoyed it and think it is your best book so far. Best Phil Jones.

- It is very well written and gave me an increased understanding of conservation and the problems with it in Africa. Josephine Strobel

- TheLast Rhino is the 3rd book written by Bob Gribbin all of which involve stories taking place in Africa. Bob has spent the vast majority of his adult life in Africa thus his writings exhibit a quality of realism to his stories. In The Last Rhino, the author lays out in a well written plot the many obstacles in preserving the wildlife and heritage of the central African landscape. Be it rogue armies, poachers, government corruption, lack of funds, Bob Gribbin weaves a story to vividly illustrate the challenges facing today's Africa. For any reader having an interest in the preservation of Africa's wildlife then The Last Rhino is a must read. I understand his impulse to resist sharing and read on. If this were written by an author with a different style, it would be a four hundred page beach read soon to be made into a major motion picture or Netflix series. As it is, it’s a book you keep nearby, waiting for an opportunity to find out what happens next. Tom Flinn


- I had trouble reviewing this book because my husband grabbed it and would not give it up.
The story takes place in Central Africa, a region the author knows well. It’s fiction, but it’s accurate and never strays into fantasy. The story begins as the hero is healing from a trauma that took place in Africa some years back. He finds that his new life in the Caribbean is pleasant but just doesn’t quite satisfy. He takes a job reopening an animal preserve in Central Africa that has been closed for years due to a long, bloody war. The chaos has encouraged poachers and many of the customs and traditions of the local people have been subverted to the need to survive in a very unfamiliar and brutal culture.
The remnants of war continue to haunt the countryside and its people. We learn of this through the characters themselves as they begin to adapt to a “new normal”. We identify with them and their struggles, as we admire the snap decisions the newly minted Park Administrator is called on to make.
If the reader knows Africa, she will be reassured that there are no false notes to distract from the story. If the reader does not know Africa, there is much to be learned from reading this book.
I warmly recommend it. Renny Smith, MSW and retired Foreign Service Officer




- Hey Bob, thoroughly enjoyed THE LAST RHINO . Hard to believe that country still
has areas that don’t seem to change at all - still live as if there has been no
change from one century to another. I can see how your characters get
so involved with the people and the animals. But it must be difficult
to deal with all the policies of the various areas. Don’tknow how you did it -
but you had/ have the personality to deal with them; patient, kind, and
blessings of our good Lord. Nan Taylor McLeod












Saturday, May 9, 2020

Poaching!

An excerpt from The Last Rhino (see following post)


She raised her trunk again and sniffed the air. Something was not quite right.  The scents of dust and acacia blossoms were normal, but there was something un-natural. She turned with ears flapping and smelled again.  She harumped a danger signal to her family. They moved smartly off into the brush. The matriarch faced the unknown. In her anxiety she pawed the ground and shook her massive head from side to side. Her big feet pushed up clouds of dust.  In an instant she saw, heard and smelled the source of danger. Trumpeting loudly, she charged, bashing through the acacia grove towards the blurs of blue.  All her instincts required that she do her duty. She must protect her family.  As she had done many times before, she would confront the danger - lions, buffalo or perhaps a stray rhino - and chase it away. Her size, the awesome spectacle of an irritated two-ton beast closing rapidly, usually worked.  But not this time.

Shots rang out. She was met with a burst of automatic weapon fire.  The noise and the smoke were terrifying.  She stumbled and fell but was shot yet again, this time from closer range. Bullets fired directly into her brain.  Her body convulsed and shuttered. She was dead.

Cries of triumph rose around the dead elephant as the shooters emerged from the trees.  Soon two of them manned axes to chop away the matriarch’s tusks.  They were not the great heavy tusks of a mature bull, but each would weigh about forty pounds - a quite respectable haul for the poachers.  They took nothing but the tusks, leaving the carcass to scavengers.  The butchers did their work quickly. They wanted to be safely gone before vultures signaled the murder.    

The fleeing herd of terrified elephants ran for miles before slowing.  They waited impatiently for their boss lady who never came.  The transition to new leadership was befuddling, but someone had to take charge. One of the older cows sensed it was now her job.  She led the group to water. 

The Last Rhino

My latest novel set in Africa is out! It is a good story that I enjoyed writing. The publicity blurb says:


Deep in the vastness of a lost corner of the Congo a reformed big game hunter tackles the management of Garamba National Park. He must wend his way through modern African bureaucracies, civil strife and corruption in order to combat elephant poachers and remnants of the Lord’s Resistance Army, all the while in search of the possibility that northern white rhino may still exist.  The saga unfolds as the hunter and his team of rangers strive to protect and resurrect the park from the ravages of neglect and war. Mysteries of tribal tradition and the very existence of vanishing species unfold along with heartwarming relationships of folks caught up in efforts to save wild creatures. Accurately set amidst the woes of contemporary Congo, the story educates and enlightens about the challenges of conservation in the troubled heart of Africa.  

That about sums it up.

The book is available from iuniverse.com or any other on-line book store. 

Reviews will be posted as they come in. Comments are welcome.