The White Rhino Hotel 

Fiction & Literature, Historical, Literary
Cover of the book The White Rhino Hotel  by Bartle Bull, Speaking Volumes
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Author: Bartle Bull ISBN: 9781628157284
Publisher: Speaking Volumes Publication: December 15, 2009
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Bartle Bull
ISBN: 9781628157284
Publisher: Speaking Volumes
Publication: December 15, 2009
Imprint:
Language: English

The White Rhino Hotel is a sweeping saga of love and revenge, of greed and loyalty, of pioneers struggling for a new life amidst the beauty and wildness of the African bush in the years immediately after World War I.

Desperate to win estates of virgin land, thousands of World War I veterans draw lots, with the winners and their families sailing for Kenya, not knowing what they will find. Like other Europeans and Africans before them, their fates often cross at Lord Penfold's White Rhino Hotel, where guests can gamble away their plantations or satisfy other desires. It is in this setting that Bartle Bull's powerful and wonder­fully evocative novel of the driving forces of nature and man's spirit of adventure takes place.

At the White Rhino Hotel travelers meet the scheming dwarf Olivio Alavedo, a man obsessed by lust and vengeance. To his ene­mies, Olivio is a cunning adversary. To the needy Lady Penfold, he is something more per­sonal. To young Anton Rider and the coura­geous pioneer Gwenn Llewelyn, the dwarf is a subtle friend. Trained by gypsies to hunt, gam­ble and read fortunes, Rider comes to Africa seeking gold, freedom and adventure, but finds violence and the passions of older women. Hardened by war, herself the victim of violation and loss, Gwenn Llewelyn seeks love as she struggles to build a future in Africa.

Set against a background of colonial and natural history, The White Rhino Hotel could only be written by someone who knows and loves Africa and who can tell a stunning tale.

Praise for Bartle Bull

"Compared with Hemingway or Ruark ... Bull's knowledge of East Africa is profound."—Washington Post Book World

"A wing-ding adventure story that I sat down to read on a Saturday night and finished on Sunday morning.... Everything comes together with a satisfying bang."—Boston Globe

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

The White Rhino Hotel is a sweeping saga of love and revenge, of greed and loyalty, of pioneers struggling for a new life amidst the beauty and wildness of the African bush in the years immediately after World War I.

Desperate to win estates of virgin land, thousands of World War I veterans draw lots, with the winners and their families sailing for Kenya, not knowing what they will find. Like other Europeans and Africans before them, their fates often cross at Lord Penfold's White Rhino Hotel, where guests can gamble away their plantations or satisfy other desires. It is in this setting that Bartle Bull's powerful and wonder­fully evocative novel of the driving forces of nature and man's spirit of adventure takes place.

At the White Rhino Hotel travelers meet the scheming dwarf Olivio Alavedo, a man obsessed by lust and vengeance. To his ene­mies, Olivio is a cunning adversary. To the needy Lady Penfold, he is something more per­sonal. To young Anton Rider and the coura­geous pioneer Gwenn Llewelyn, the dwarf is a subtle friend. Trained by gypsies to hunt, gam­ble and read fortunes, Rider comes to Africa seeking gold, freedom and adventure, but finds violence and the passions of older women. Hardened by war, herself the victim of violation and loss, Gwenn Llewelyn seeks love as she struggles to build a future in Africa.

Set against a background of colonial and natural history, The White Rhino Hotel could only be written by someone who knows and loves Africa and who can tell a stunning tale.

Praise for Bartle Bull

"Compared with Hemingway or Ruark ... Bull's knowledge of East Africa is profound."—Washington Post Book World

"A wing-ding adventure story that I sat down to read on a Saturday night and finished on Sunday morning.... Everything comes together with a satisfying bang."—Boston Globe

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