Lt. Col. J.H. Patterson's "Man-Eaters of Tsavo"

One of my favorite books, I own the movie but it really irritates me to watch it considering all the Hollywood nonsense added into it. I think Death in the long grass would make a great movie if it was done properly.
 
After watching Ghost and darkness, those lions scared me so much, I gave up hunting lions.....samething happened when I watched Piranha as a young kid, I haven't put my toe in the water since them. Just kidding. The book is brilliant, but as we all Hollywood sometimes pushes it a bit too far. But I will admit I have watched the movie several times, Val is a brilliant actor and sure did his bit in the movie as well as his tattooed side kick.
 
While I had seen The Ghost and the Darkness a few times (purely entertainment), I finally read the book The Man-Eaters of Tsavo last summer. I thoroughly enjoyed it so much, that I decided to start collecting some of the classics in reading concerning hunting in Africa. (If I cannot hunt Africa at the moment, I can at least spend some of my free time reading ABOUT hunting in Africa. :LOL::rolleyes:) Now, if I could only find the time to read even one book in one sitting.

A book I am currently reading (along with four or five others), and HIGHLY recommend, is Kambaku. Henry Manners does a beautiful job of making you feel as if you are walking alongside him every step of the way. If you enjoy elephant hunting, or dream about one day going on that big elephant hunt, this book is a must read. :)

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I really enjoyed the book - because it's about more than the lions of Tsavo. The book covers his adventures building the railroad of which the lions were a part. A great view of Africa in the late 19th/Early 20th Century
 
Patterson may have been inexperienced but you can't fault his courage or his doggedness in getting the job done. He spent a lot of sleepless nights in very uncomfortable situations and still managed his day job, which under the circumstances would have been tough for the best of men. I was duly impressed.
Philip
 
Patterson may have been inexperienced but you can't fault his courage or his doggedness in getting the job done. He spent a lot of sleepless nights in very uncomfortable situations and still managed his day job, which under the circumstances would have been tough for the best of men. I was duly impressed.
Philip

yup and you wonder at how he survived some of the situations he put himself in and didnt become a victim......
 
I thoroughly enjoyed the book, a true life adventure. There were many of these young officers that went to Africa or other areas of the world and luckily LCol Patterson penned the book preserving his story. I often wonder what other stories could be told by the many young officers that didn't return due to sickness and peril. Sealous's book "A hunter's wanderings in Africa" really describes the tough conditions these guys endured albeit he was there quite a bit earlier than LCol Patterson. As for the movie, it is just that a Hollywood movie, although it is entertaining I believe as I have watched it more than once!
 
While I had seen The Ghost and the Darkness a few times (purely entertainment), I finally read the book The Man-Eaters of Tsavo last summer. I thoroughly enjoyed it so much, that I decided to start collecting some of the classics in reading concerning hunting in Africa. (If I cannot hunt Africa at the moment, I can at least spend some of my free time reading ABOUT hunting in Africa. :LOL::rolleyes:) Now, if I could only find the time to read even one book in one sitting.

A book I am currently reading (along with four or five others), and HIGHLY recommend, is Kambaku. Henry Manners does a beautiful job of making you feel as if you are walking alongside him every step of the way. If you enjoy elephant hunting, or dream about one day going on that big elephant hunt, this book is a must read. :)

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Thanks for your response WalkingPrey2! I will definitely look into reading Kambaku. I have several elephant hunting books and enjoy them very much!
 
Thanks guys for your input!
 
I just finished the book, and it was definitely a fantastic read. It's one of those books that is hard to put down once you have started it. I found some of his other stories in the second half of the book to be equally as entertaining as the story of the man-eaters. A few take home points for me:

1. I've never hunted in Africa, but his stories really gave me an appreciation for modern high quality bullets vs what people in his time had to use, as well as using enough gun. Many of his close calls and wounded animals might have been avoided if he had better constructed bullets and/or something more powerful than his .303. I found the part particularly amusing where he improvised a heavy rifle for a hippo hunt by loading double charges of powder behind slugs for his 12 bore shotgun, and test fired it with a string in case the barrels exploded.

2. Patterson may have started out as an amateur, but he seemed to really have a knack for killing lions by the end of the book, given what he had to work with.

3. I don't understand why there is so much hate for the movie. Having watched it countless times, I was surprised to learn upon reading the book just how much of the movie was not far from reality. Some of the things that I had assumed were hollywood embellishments turned out to be somewhat accurate; the manner in which the lions reportedly fed on their victims, the trap he set for the lions that failed, the borrowed heavy rifle that failed to fire at a critical moment, the finding of the man-eaters' den with human remains, etc. I do agree that Michael Douglas' character was not necessary, and the final sequence could have been better. However, I felt that the movie does a decent job of capturing the highlights and overall spirit of what occurred. It even uses period-correct weapons that appear to be, for the most part, wielded in a somewhat authentic manner. Considering the source is Hollywood, I think its about as good a rendition as one could expect from them.

4. Seeing the Lee-Speed in the movie has always made me want one, and now reading the book has only perpetuated this.
 
Patterson's book was excellent. I always enjoy firsthand accounts from the colonial days and his was particularly good. I liked the comment I read that he was an engineer who had to come to the rifle. Very fitting because as an engineer, he had a project to finish (the bridge and railroad), a problem to resolve (the lions), and he dealt with same. I often wonder what he really thought was his greater accomplishment - the lions or the railway. Again, a great book and certainly a must read.
 

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