Book Store



 Location:  Home » Books » African Queen  
Books Home

  • Movie Store
  • Music Store
  • Game Store
  • Software Store
  • Tool Store
  • Shopping Mall
  • Categories
    Books
    Kindle
    Magazines
    Related Categories
    • Drama
    Literature & Fiction
    Books on CD
    Audiobooks
    Formats
    • Radio Shows
    Books on CD
    Audiobooks
    Formats
    Custom Stores
    • General
    Books on CD
    Audiobooks
    Formats
    Custom Stores
    • General
    Theater
    Performing Arts
    Arts & Photography
    Subjects
    • General Broadcasting
    Radio
    Entertainment
    Subjects
    Books
    • General
    Radio
    Entertainment
    Subjects
    Books
    • General
    Entertainment
    Subjects
    Books
    • General
    Drama
    Literature & Fiction
    Subjects
    Books
    • Books on CD
    Audiobooks
    Format (feature_browse-bin)
    Refinements
    Books

    African Queen

    Author: C.S. Forester
    Publisher: Greenpark Media Ltd
    Category: Book

    Buy Used: $108.91
    as of 2/9/2010 20:47 EST details



    Seller: internationalbooks
    Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 17 reviews
    Sales Rank: 8634816

    Format: Audiobook
    Media: Audio CD
    Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
    Dimensions (in): 5.5 x 4.9 x 0.4

    ISBN: 1904533027
    EAN: 9781904533023
    ASIN: 1904533027

    Publication Date: November 15, 2002
    Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

    Also Available In:

      • Paperback - The African Queen
      • Paperback - The African Queen: 1400 Headwords (Oxford Bookworms Library)
      • Paperback - The African Queen
      • Audio Cassette - The African Queen
      • Hardcover - The African Queen
      • Hardcover - African Queen (Abridged Books)
      • Paperback - African Queen (Imprint Books)
      • Paperback - African Queen (New Method Supplementary Readers)
      • Hardcover - AFRICAN QUEEN
      • Audio Cassette - The African Queen
      • Hardcover - The African Queen
      • Paperback - The African Queen
      • Paperback - The African Queen
      • Hardcover - The African Queen (G K Hall Perennial Large Print Book)
      • Hardcover - African Queen
      • Audio Cassette - The African Queen (Old Time Radio)
      • Audio Cassette - The African Queen
      • Audio Cassette - The African Queen
      • Audio Cassette - The African Queen
      • Hardcover - The African Queen
      • Hardcover - The African Queen
      • Library Binding - The African Queen
      • Library Binding - African Queen
      • Library Binding - The African Queen
      • Audio Cassette - The African Queen (Sterling Audio Series)
      • Unknown Binding - The African Queen
      • Audio Cassette - The African Queen
      • Audio Cassette - The African Queen
      • Unknown Binding - The African Queen
      • Hardcover - The African queen, (The Modern library of the world's best books)
      • Mass Market Paperback - The African queen
      • Unknown Binding - The African Queen (Ulverscroft large print series)
      • Unknown Binding - The African Queen (Armed Services edition)
      • Mass Market Paperback - The African Queen (Bantam Book)
      • Paperback - The African Queen: 1400 Headwords (Oxford Bookworms Library)

    Similar Items:


    Editorial Reviews:

    Product Description
    The African Queen is an old, dirty, ugly, unreliable steamboat. No one would take a boat like that down a dangerous river through the jungles of Central Africa during the First World War. But Rose Sayer and Charlie Allnut do just that. They come close to death many times, but no one would expect a missionary's sister and a rough, uneducated mechanic to fall in love ...The film of this famous love and adventure story, made in 1951, starred Katherine Hepburn and Humphrey Bogart, and went on to become one of the most popular films ever made.


    Customer Reviews:
    Showing reviews 1-5 of 17



    4 out of 5 stars A good little adventure   November 3, 2008
    Ewen Penberthy-groves (Los Angeles, CA)
    Although personally I do not believe the writers best work (Hornblower is just incredible), it is still a fantastic read. One of the best writers I believe in anything associated with maritime and naval stories.
    This story has only a few elements to work with but creates a great light read. The story is so good there is no need for any major complex twists, turns or tricks making it very digestible. A welcome read if you have just spent the last few books in heavy intense thrillers or of the like.
    The writer obviously knew what they were talking about as some of the details are not only incredibly interesting, but also incredible at creating suspense. The details do not bore you at all and treats you like you are intelligent enough to understand what is being said, which is a massive relief from the spoon feeding of other writers.
    The book is a well written breath of fresh air. Like tea on the porch in the fall. lol.



    3 out of 5 stars African Queen - too little for a book - but a fine screen play   March 26, 2008
    William J. Dinehart (Gainesville, Florida)
    0 out of 1 found this review helpful

    The African Queen - C.S. Forrester. Weak. Good, but weak. The movie may have won an academy award but the book comes up short. More of a novella, or screenplay than a book. The author could have doubled the text and it may well have been a good book. I appreciate the drama of the two people pulled from separate worlds that are changed dramatically by unfolding events and raise themselves to previously unimagined feats of character and bravery. Still, it was a wasted effort, two little to hang it all on and a pointless ending.


    4 out of 5 stars in this case the movie was better   April 13, 2007
    Becs (Australia)
    2 out of 3 found this review helpful

    If I love a movie, I will often read the book with the expectation that it will be better.
    In this case I think the movie is better than the book. Not that it is a bad book, I found it enjoyable enough. I just think that Bogey's and Hepburn's interpretation of the characters is what really brought this story to life.



    4 out of 5 stars The ending redeems itself   March 18, 2007
    Plonit Almonit (Brooklyn, New York)
    3 out of 3 found this review helpful

    Throughout most of the book, I found myself thinking, "This is one case where I like the movie better." Although the plot for the first 3/4 of the book is the same as the movie's, the characterization is a bit different. For example, the movie portrays Rose as a determind, principled, yet prim woman who slowly learns to love; in the book, she comes across as a bit immature, supposedly the result of being repressed by men her entire life, and is so thrilled with the freedom earned by her brother's recent death that she decides to kamikaze a German boat. Personally, I found the movie's Rose more realistic and likeable; the book's Rose felt too much like a poster child of feminist propoganda.

    In general, most of the novel is a bit heavy-handed is describing the character's motives, characters, and thought processes, and leaves very little to the imagination. Subtlety, apparently, is not Forester's strong point.

    The only thing keeping me from giving this book a lower rating is the ending. Forester truly redeems himself in my eyes with the ending, which is far darker and more realistic than the movie's. The ending calls into question everythng that you assumed that Forester was trying to tell you -- all the notions of heroism, patriotism, and true love. The last line is probably one of my favorite of all last lines,


    (Spoiler space)



    forcing you to ask yourself: Are Charlie and Rose truly soulmates, or has an extreme situation simply brought them together and instigated passion? While in the movie it is clear that Charlie and Rose truly love another, the book suggests that their "love" may simply be due to the arousal that arises during a near-death situation. For me, this very human, bittersweet ending enabled me to forgive Forester for his earlier heavy-handed treatment of the characters.




    2 out of 5 stars Was This A College Writing Assignment?   March 14, 2007
    T. Leach (Mid-West)
    2 out of 7 found this review helpful

    I was shocked to learn how bad this book really is. The title is so beloved by many as the Bogart/Hepburn classic, and one would expect the book to not only match the Hollywood translation but to dwarf it with typical literary superiority. Not so. The basic plot itself is brilliant enough in its simplicity: two unlikely characters (the archetypical Cockney grease monkey and the chaste maiden) have an adventurous float down an untamed river on a cocked-up mission to sink a German gunship. Ok so far. What Forester does with this promising seed is ridiculous and leaves the reader wondering whether this was all just a vehicle for Forester to deliver a little saucy "maiden-missionary-loses-her-virginity" stuff mixed in with his clearly evident views that missionaries are idiots. Forester's story is outrageous on all levels. From the timely and chance first meeting between Rose and Allnut, to the mere minutes that it took for Rose to hatch her ignorant plot to sink a German warship, to Allnut's agreement to participate, to the absurd success of the journey, to the ridiculous "Cockney ingenuity" with which Allnut fashions a propeller out of a coconut or some such stunt, Forester lays a number of eggs. The creme de la creme is Rose's glorious fall from grace. This whole angle of the book borders on soft porn, at least by 1930's standards. Are we to believe that this apparently devout missionary woman has maintained her purity for all these years just to give it all to this unbathed louse? Forester clearly delighted in this stuff: at one point, he actually describes Rose's 'chests' as literally levitating with her newfound vigor and energy - having replaced her former existence of Christian bondage with a new life of unbridled jungle boogie. Come on. Last criticism, with a SPOILER ALERT: the movie's ending is much better than the novel's. Whereas the movie made the boat (the very namesake of the book) into one of the main characters that ultimately sunk the German gunboat, Forester sinks the Afican Queen early and unceremoniously, and then takes the reader through an irrelevant account of Belgian naval manuevers and German military justice. Anyway, I've written enough: stick to the movie.

    Showing reviews 1-5 of 17


    CERTAIN CONTENT THAT APPEARS ON THIS SITE COMES FROM AMAZON SERVICES LLC. THIS CONTENT IS PROVIDED ‘AS IS’ AND IS SUBJECT TO CHANGE OR REMOVAL AT ANY TIME.

    Proud member of the Celebrity Pro Network. Make sure you check out these other great sites:

    Lyrics Database   Celebrity Blog   Celebrity Thing   Celebrity PC   Latest Celebrity Photos   Web Portal   Travel Photos   Quotes   Flash Games


    Inside Jacket




    Is there a better
    price available?


    Find out: