Girish Mahajan (Editor)

The Sunbird

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Publication date
  
1972

Author
  
Wilbur Smith

Country
  
South Africa


Language
  
English

Originally published
  
1972

Publisher
  
Heinemann

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Similar
  
Wilbur Smith books, Other books

The Sunbird is a 1972 novel by Wilbur Smith about an archeological dig.

The novel was a favourite of Smith's, who claimed it was heavily influenced by H. Rider Haggard. Smith:

It was a very important book for me in my development as a writer because at that stage I was starting to become enchanted by the lure of Hollywood. There had been some movies made of my books and I thought "whoa, what a way to go… All that money!" and I thought "hold on - am I a scriptwriter or am I a real writer?" Writing a book that could never be filmed was my declaration of independence. I made it so diffuse, with different ages and brought characters back as different entities. It was a complex book, it gave me a great deal of pleasure but that was the inspiration - to break free.

Smith later named his home "Sunbird Hill".

Academic Martin Hall has criticized The Sunbird for its inherent stance against African nationalism and implicit defense of white rule in southern Africa.

Film rights to the book were bought by Michael Klinger who filmed two other Smith novels. However as of 2016 no film has resulted.

Progressive death metal/rock band Opeth took its name from the word "Opet", which in the novel is the name of a fictional Phoenician city in South Africa and whose name is translated as "City of the Moon".

References

The Sunbird Wikipedia