Another famous writer of this period is H. Rider Haggard, author of King Solomon’s Mines and She, and creator of the famous African adventurer, Allan Quatermain. We’ve been great fans of his for over 50 years, and finally decided that in spite of the spate of Haggard reprints available, that we had to add at least one of our own.
So we present ten masterful tales of history, mystery and adventure including…
Smith and the Pharaohs: James Smith leads a very ordinary life until he falls in love with an image of an Egyptian queen in the British Museum, and becomes obsessed with ancient Egyptian history. While on an excavating trip, he comes across a lost tomb—and discovers the resting place of Ma-Mee, the very queen that so captivated him in London.
Little Flower: The Reverend Bull is sent with his wife and daughter—whom the natives call “Little Flower”—to convert a tribe of Zulus to Christianity. But Bull’s obstinacy is no match for Menzi, the local witch-doctor.
Hunter Quatermain’s Story: Quatermain and his two trusted companions, having lost their supply wagon to an unfortunate fire, head off on foot for the nearest town. But first they must fend off a lion and do battle with a bull buffalo.
The Mahatma and the Hare: A man has a curious dream in which he becomes the Mahatma overserving the souls who have left the physical world for the spiritual realm. While there, he encounters a hare, and learns what it is to be the hunted instead of the hunter.
As Deuce Richardson writes about Haggard in his introduction: “The argument can be made that no author of the last century and a half has influenced Anglophone 'genre' fiction more than H. Rider Haggard. He was almost a living idol to British literary titans like Kipling and Doyle. H.P. Lovecraft praised him. Tolkien and C.S. Lewis were fans. The same can be said of Robert E. Howard and Fritz Leiber.” You’ll be in good company with this one.