It is the turn of the century. South Africa is on the brink of the Boer War, Oscar Wilde is dying of syphillis (or was it an ear infection?), Kipling is writing his books and `The White Man's Burden', Lewis Carroll has just died, Darwin's theories are the subject of dinner table conversation, shooting big mammals is a gentleman's game, and the Dodo has long been extinct -- one specimen's remains are on display in the Oxford Museum (of Natural History).
Prof Wills, an eccentric Oxford don, is sent to Cape Town with hundreds of English songbirds by a tycoon who believes that the birds' songs will save his life; However the birds are now confused and muted by the change of hemisphere, and this is not Wills' only problem as he is dragged into South Africa's political situation.
The storyline moves between Oxford and Cape Town, and back and front in time. Wills meets dozens of historic figures which is part of this novel's formula (being a historic novel), but this can also be its weakest point (that is, what may make some readers dislike this novel) since historic figures (and locations) are iconic and it is hard to avoid mentioning their stereotypical features. Personaly, I have no strong opinions on the personalities of these figures, and I enjoyed reading this novel, and I guess that most readers will.
I found the main character extememly unlikable during the beginning of this novel, but I eventually found myself more and more amused by his eccentricities, pedantry, mundane worries and pompous language.
Very readable and enjoyable. Highly recommended.