The Drums of Africa
Tim Schell’s first novel The Drums of Africa is a gripping and timely tale of two young Americans, Val and Glen, arriving in Africa as Peace Corps Volunteers in the 1970’s, filled with altruism, naivete and a thirst for adventure. As the line between adventure and catastrophe narrows, Schell masterfully creates a mosaic of cultural perspectives and ethnic tensions between faith and its lack, politics and revolutionary coups, lust and love set against an exotic backdrop rife with sorcerers, priests, corrupt politicians, poachers, coffee farmers, Peace Corps workers, and prostitutes, a place leading each character inward to unexpected self-revelation and self-sacrifice. A richly panoplied novel, alive with sensuous detail and compelling narrative, The Drums of Africa is both an adventure tale and a philosophical rumination on the power of crisis and contradiction to test and ultimately transforms ideals, laws, ancient instincts, faith and the challenges presented by human love met by human courage.
--Melissa Pritchard, author of Palmerino