Finished A Cafe on the Nile by Bartle Bull (Italian invasion of Ethiopia in 1935), the second in his Anton Rider tetralogy starting with the excellent The White Rhino Hotel (WW1 in Africa and its aftermath) and continuing with The Devil's Oasis (WW2 in the desert 1939-1941). Excellent novel - my Goodreads review below and the blurb after
The second in the Anton Rider tetralogy set more than a decade later during the start of the Italian invasion of Ethiopia. A bit slow going in the beginning, the novel starts in Cairo where the dwarf Olivio owns the cafe of the title and the main characters gather.
The novel follows a few threads - Anton's safari in Ethiopia with two rich American twin girls out for adventure and fun and the artist fiance of one of them, Gwenn's journey to keep her two sons fed and educated at all costs while she pursues her dream medical career, Ernst' scheme to swindle the Italians and get himself a fortune, Olivio and Lord Penfold schemes to get rich buying pieces of desert that will get irrigated under the Egyptian government plans to expand their agriculture and (new series character) Enzo Grimaldi, colonel aviator in the Italian invasion force and longtime lover and protector of Gwenn who left Anton once their Kenyan estate failed and Anton refused to leave his nomadic safari organizer and guide life, Enzo who is outraged that Gwenn plans to go to Ethiopia in a Red Cross uniform to help the natives if/when the Italians invade.
Most of the narratives are excellent - only Olivio's quest for riches and to extend his life (he is 50 which is very ancient for a person with his disabilities and he hires a German-Swiss expert to help him live longer) are less interesting, while unexpectedly Enzo's journey (among other things he has to babysit Mussolini's young sons who want to be aviators, obfuscate the Italian use of toxic gases against the Ethiopians and eliminate any credible witnesses like western aid workers) is very interesting as the colonel, brutal and a believer in Italian destiny to rule in Africa, has also a moral code of his own as opposed to some of his fascist officers who are just brutal.
The safari part and the tension between the twins and Anton is also excellent with memorable scenes like when the twins fight for the right to spy on Anton making love with his Portuguese "contesse" friend from the last book whom he meets by chance during their journey, while Ernst' monomaniacal goal to get a fortune from the Italian pay chests lead him to interesting encounters, including a stint as civet feeder at an island monastery and a grudge to the death ongoing fight with colonel Grimaldi who of course wants to recover the money...
And so it goes, alternating between the narratives, with some more energetic than others, so the book reads somewhat in a start, stop, start again manner but it is definitely worth. No sugarcoating of the difficult life in the bush, of the hideous brutality of war and of the lengths people go for money and power, with tragedy and triumph and with no one coming unscathed from their experiences, if of course they survive it...
Highly recommended and even better than White Rhino in many ways
Blurb:
It is 1935 in East Africa. Mussolini's armies are streaming by the hundreds of thousands through Suez on a march to Ethiopia. In the desert the Italian Air Force, equipped with bombs and poison gas, prepares for invasion. Abyssinia sits on the edge of a nightmare that will alter modern history, while safaris in the African highlands cater to the excesses of the wealthy and disenchanted. And in Cairo, on the Nile, the cosmopolitan crowd gathers at the Cataract Café to gamble with destiny.
All paths cross at the Cataract Café. There, with a single word, a simple gesture, an extravagant gift, alliances are drawn, deals made, and fates unwittingly determined for the memorable cast of characters that people this tale of high adventure. There professional hunter Anton Rider's Gypsy blood runs cold when he spies his estranged wife, Gwenn, with her lover, the Italian count and aviator Lorenzo Grimaldi. There the spoiled, rich American twins from Lexington, Bernadette and Harriet Mills, contract Rider for an ill-fated safari across East Africa with Ernst von Decken, a German freebooter who has stolen a fortune in silver from the Italian army. There Olivio Alavedo, the Goan proprietor of the Cataract Café, celebrates the fifty years that have blessed him with the friendship of the down-at-the-heel English lord Adam Penfold, with a good wife, six daughters, an exotic mistress, and useful political connections. A dwarf, Olivio also suffers his age and knows he won’t see fifty-five. But no one knows just how dangerously the days are numbered at the Cataract Café.