Saturday, August 29, 2009

Mark of the Lion by Suzanne Arruda

Mark of the Lion
A Jade Del Cameron Novel
By Suzanne Arruda



The Mark of the Lion introduces us to Jade Del Cameron, a young woman with a strong sense of adventure. Jade grew up on a ranch in Cimarron, New Mexico where she learned to ride, shoot, and take care of herself. She is studying languages at Winsor College in England when WWI breaks out. She leaves school and joins the Hacket-Lowther ambulance unit.

When we first meet Jade it is 1918 and she is driving an army ambulance in France. She returns to the evacuation hospital from the front with a full load of wounded just in time to witness a dog fight between a German plane and her good friend David’s Sopwith Camel. David loses. As she holds his battered body he uses his last breath to ask her to find his brother. The problem is that as far as anyone knows he was an only child.

When the war ends Jade returns to England to finish her studies but the trauma of War and David’s request has left her unable to settle down. She takes a job with The Traveler magazine as a reporter and photographer and sets off for Africa where David‘s father died under suspicious circumstances while trying to find his illegitimate son.

Once in Nairobi Jade quickly learns that something very strange is happening. The natives are being terrorized by a witch doctor called a Laibon. There have been attacks by wild animals that have had strange patterns shaved into their fur, a sign of human control. The natives believe that this Laibon not only controls the animals but is capable of changing his own form from human to animal.

As Jade pursues her quest she meets a colorful assortment of people, some helpful, some not so helpful. In order to succeed in her quest and stay alive she will need to call upon all of her courage and ingenuity.

Mark of the Lion is an excellent read. Suzanne Arruda brings to life the beauty and magnificence of a land not yet “tamed” by man. She also brings to life the culture clash that existed between the native Africans who lived with nature and the British who conquered nature.