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The Last Maasai Warrior
  

The Last Maasai Warrior [Paperback]

Frank Coates


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Product Details

  • Paperback: 464 pages
  • Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers (Australia) Pty Ltd (Sep 1 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0732286476
  • ISBN-13: 978-0732286477
  • Product Dimensions: 23.6 x 15.2 x 4.4 cm
  • Shipping Weight: 780 g
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #1,177,261 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Product Description

Product Description

In 1904, the British government promised the Maasai control of their traditional lands - for so long as they shall exist as a people. Seven years later, that promise is broken, and the Maasai must choose between war with a powerful enemy and a perilous trek to the land allocated them by the government. Ole Sadera has risen from village scapegoat to leadership of his people. Now, they look to him for answers, while he struggles with betrayal and rapid change - and his desire for another man's wife. British administrator George Coll arrives in East Africa to face impossible choices of his own. How can he do the job he has been given and stay silent? And how can he ask the woman he loves to share an uncertain future? The Maasai gather to make their historic decision...and an Empire holds its breath.

About the Author

Frank Coates was born in Melbourne and, after graduating as a professional engineer, worked for many years as a telecommunications specialist in Australia and overseas. In 1989 he was appointed as a UN technical specialist in Nairobi, Kenya, and travelled extensively throughout the eastern and southern parts of Africa over the next four years. During this time, Frank developed a passion for the history and culture of East Africa, which inspired his first novel, Tears of the Maasai. He followed it up with Beyond Mombasa, In Search of Africa, and now Roar of the Lion.

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Amazon.com: 4.0 out of 5 stars (1 customer review)

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Proud People That Stand Tall, Aug 7 2009
By Jeannie Mancini "vernefan" - Published on Amazon.com
Ce commentaire est de: The Last Maasai Warrior (Paperback)
When baby Ole Sadera was born, his mother birthed him in the sea, and when they rose up from the ocean's shallow surf, he had a stone clenched in each of his tiny newborn fists. For many generations African legend tells the story that at some time in the future, a boy will be born with a stone in his hand, and that he will be the greatest warrior of the land that will save his people from annihilation.

Thus lies this story of the Last Maasai Warrior by Frank Coates. It is the harrowing tale of a lifelong friendship of two warriors who grew up as friends, and grew to be men constantly add odds as to how to lead their people, the Maasai tribe of the Great Rift Valley near Nairobi. As the book opens, Britain is once again arrogantly invading Africa and claiming land as their own. The British government sends emissaries lacking in sympathy to negotiate land deals so that they may turn real estate property into areas of British settlement and fortune for the crown. These shady transactions swindle and mislead the Maasai people, a quiet peaceful tribe, that mistakenly entrust the British to do right by them. This sorrowful tale of deception and corruption from the British towards the Maasai is a eye-opening and disheartening story based on true events that will leave the reader questioning their faith in humanity. Coates fictionalizes this true life occurrence, vividly depicting the long struggle that the Maasai must endure as the British brutally destroy their culture, their heritage, and continually keep shuffling these people from territory to territory as they claim the Maasailand for their own, leaving the tribe without means of survival. Shifting these people to lands without water and without grazing grounds for their coveted herds of cattle, leave the proud Maasai destined for suffering and eradication.

This novel is based on a crisis in Africa's history that took place in the early part of the last century. The book is very well written and evocative of the time and place giving the reader a true account of exactly what occurred and how events unfolded for the Maasai, as they bravely learn to mistrust the British and learn to fight for what has been their own since the beginning of mankind.

I have always been very interested in reading about Africa and have been intrigued by the Maasai for a long time. I felt that while reading this book, the author did well to introduce me to the Maasai people, their culture, and about their silent yet proud personalities. The character of Ole Sadera is someone you are at first unsure of, and that you want to love because he has so much emotion and anger inside of him. He has much pride for his people that are being lied to and misled, so much inner fear that the tribe will be removed from mother earth. You will feel deeply for his pain and his ambivalence as he strives to know who to follow. From the sidelines you will watch him turn to fellow warriors, his elders, a woman he loves that is the wife of another man, and you will cry for him as his people are not of the same mind to fight for the cause he so desperately believes in.

There are other background characters in the book, other British settlers that are on the side of the Maasai and are also fighting along with Ole Sadera. These characters are endearing and are people you will come to love and cheer on as they help Ole with the battle to the end. If you are looking for an African story that is full of action and adventure, you will not find it here. This is rather an emotionally charged moving saga of a bitter feud between two races of people. One hell-bent on bullying and betrayal to attain their greed, another floundering to stand tall and not let their people be erased from history. I thoroughly enjoyed this book and as I turned the last page, became determined to find more books about the Maasai people that I fell in love with while reading The Last Maasai Warrior. Coates is an outstanding author many have not heard of, and finding his other African sagas is high on my wish list of books to buy soon.
 Go to Amazon U.S. to see the review  4.0 out of 5 stars 

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