Description
Book SynopsisFor lovers of Alexander McCall Smith, Nicholas Drayson introduces the charming Mr Malik and the East African Ornithological Society in A Guide to the Birds of East Africa.
Reserved, honourable Mr Malik. You wouldn''t notice him in a Nairobi street - except, perhaps, to comment on his carefully sculpted comb-over - but beneath his unprepossessing exterior lie a warm heart and a secret passion. Not even his closest friends know it, but Mr Malik is head-over-heels in love with the leader of the local Tuesday-morning bird walk, Rose Mbikwa.
Little can he imagine the hurdles that lie before him. Even as he plucks up the courage to ask for Rose''s hand, thieves, potential kidnappers and corrupt officials, not to mention one particularly determined love rival, seem destined to thwart Mr Malik''s chances.
Will an Indian gentleman in the heart of Africa be defeated by the many obstacles that stand between him and his heart''s desire? Or will honour and decency pre
Trade Review
A book of immense charm; a sort of P G Wodehouse meets Alexander McCall Smith * Joanne Harris *
An enchanting comedy of bird-watching, love and African life * Woman & Home *
A delightful comedy... It invites comparison to The No.1 Ladies' Detective Agency books, but it's original and, if anything, has more depth * Daily Mail *
Sweet, charming and utterly wonderful on the subject of birds * Metro *
A perfect holiday read * Prima *
A charming satire - think William Boyd's A Good Man of Africa with a dash of Alexander McCall Smith * Conde Nast Traveller *
Heart-warming, I was charmed . . . akin to the No 1 Ladies Detective AgencySeries [with] a flavour all its own * Richard Fortey *
Drayson's tale, spiked with a comtemporary sensibility and wit, teases apart the strands of life in Nairobi... More than that, it's a page-turner... Charming, certainly, but far from cloying * Wanderlust *