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Jimgrim and the Lost Trooper

door Talbot Mundy

Reeksen: Jimgrim (6)

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Adventures in Araby -- what is now Palestine and Israel and Jordan and Saudi Arabia and Iraq -- with Jimgrim -- Major James Schuyler Grim -- and assorted adventurers. "You couldn't find a tougher, less easily stampeded gang in Asia Minor than the party Grim had left with me. They spat on their cartridges and crammed them in like veteran soldiers instead of the thieves they were by trade, and each bullet was loosed on its way with an appropriate curse, until Narayan Singh on the far right laughed so that he could hardly shoot straight. And the camels went down one by one like great ships sinking, pitching up their sterns as they plunged bow first. But that war-cry, ""Allaho Akbar "" is something more than a formula. It seems to fire the men who use it with a frenzy that bullets can't quench. Camels fell, but their riders charged forward on foot, and by that time they could guess how few we were, which added confidence to fury. The amount of nickel-coated lead that a charging Arab can eat up as he comes is incredible. There isn't an animal -- not even a bear -- that can compare with him. That gang of fanatics charged home -- got right into the middle of us -- and used their knives to such effect that Ali Baba and his youngest son Mahommed were the only two who hadn't some sort of wound to show by the time we had beaten off their survivors."… (meer)
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This entry in the Jimgrim series is a bit of a reset after the previous two novels--not forgetting that all of these novels, published by Hutchinson in the early 1930s, were book editions of the stories that appeared in Adventure magazine during the early 1920s. It's not that it's plodding, but it does emphasize Jimgrim's application of strategy and tactics for desert warfare more fully than any book in the series so far. It also introduces a new character, Jeremy Ross, an Australian enlisted man who joins up with Jimgrim and Ramsden on an adventure to protect a gold mine deep in the Trans-Jordan. And lest anyone thinks Mundy might be inclined to stereotype Arabs unfairly, wait until you see what Mundy does with Jeremy and Australians.

Otherwise, in this book and the one to follow, The King in Check aka Affair in Araby, Mundy is at his most explicit in identifying himself and Jimgrim with the Arab cause. Their sympathies are clear. And the arguments in the book, the history, the commentary, and the recent events of World War I, all reinforce that point of view.

This is another good adventure story, but, again, it is setting up the next installment in the series rather than offering an end in itself. ( )
  PaulCornelius | Apr 12, 2020 |
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Adventures in Araby -- what is now Palestine and Israel and Jordan and Saudi Arabia and Iraq -- with Jimgrim -- Major James Schuyler Grim -- and assorted adventurers. "You couldn't find a tougher, less easily stampeded gang in Asia Minor than the party Grim had left with me. They spat on their cartridges and crammed them in like veteran soldiers instead of the thieves they were by trade, and each bullet was loosed on its way with an appropriate curse, until Narayan Singh on the far right laughed so that he could hardly shoot straight. And the camels went down one by one like great ships sinking, pitching up their sterns as they plunged bow first. But that war-cry, ""Allaho Akbar "" is something more than a formula. It seems to fire the men who use it with a frenzy that bullets can't quench. Camels fell, but their riders charged forward on foot, and by that time they could guess how few we were, which added confidence to fury. The amount of nickel-coated lead that a charging Arab can eat up as he comes is incredible. There isn't an animal -- not even a bear -- that can compare with him. That gang of fanatics charged home -- got right into the middle of us -- and used their knives to such effect that Ali Baba and his youngest son Mahommed were the only two who hadn't some sort of wound to show by the time we had beaten off their survivors."

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