I’d read quite a few of Peter McCurtin’s novels before and always enjoyed them, so I expected to like SOLDIER OF FORTUNE #1: MASSACRE AT UMTALI even though I’m not a very big fan of mercenary yarns. The protagonist/narrator is Jim Rainey, a Texan and a Vietnam vet who has become a soldier of fortune. This is the first book in the series, but it’s not an origin story. The impression I get is that Rainey has been working as a mercenary for quite a while when it begins.
McCurtin starts with Rainey arriving in Rhodesia, where he’s hired by the
government to head up an anti-terrorist squad going after a brutal warlord who
calls himself Colonel Gwanda. The reader becomes acquainted with some of the
other members of the squad, just as Rainey does, and then, without wasting much
time, they’re off to the wild country along the border between Rhodesia and
Mozambique to hunt down and capture Colonel Gwanda. The authorities want him
brought back alive, if possible, so they can make an example of him by hanging
him.
Rainey and his men pick up their quarry’s trail at the site of a massacre where
Gwanda and his followers have wiped out an entire town. The plot is really
pretty simple: Can they find Gwanda and capture him, and if they capture him,
can they get him back to the capital alive?
This is a fairly short novel, and the action really races along, to boot. I read it in two sittings, which is very fast for me even when I’m enjoying a book. And I enjoyed MASSACRE AT UMTALI a lot, considerably more than I expected to. Most of the appeal comes from Jim Rainey’s narrative voice. He may be a cold-blooded killer when he needs to be, but he’s also a very likable guy. McCurtin wasn’t a Texan or a country boy in real life, but he does a great job with Rainey’s character.
The Soldier of Fortune series was created and edited by McCurtin and all the books were published under his name even though a few of them were ghosted by Ralph Hayes and Paul Hofrichter. This debut novel was published in 1976, and it’s very much a product of its time, meaning it’s so politically incorrect that it might give modern readers the vapors. I thoroughly enjoyed it and plan to read more in the series.
You can find used copies of the original paperback editions of MASSACRE AT UMTALI (it went through at least two printings with different covers, and I own one of them), and it’s also available on Amazon in an e-book edition from Piccadilly Publishing. That’s the version I read, and it has an excellent, informative “About the Author” section at the end that’s well worth reading. For a long time, there was some debate among paperback fans as to whether Peter McCurtin was a real person or just a house-name. I remember being part of that conversation. Now we know that he was real, even though other authors sometimes wrote under his name and he wrote under house-names, too. I’m glad we know more about him now, and I look forward to reading more of his novels.
1 comment:
I have this on my Kindle but haven't gotten around to it yet. I might have to move it up the list.
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