The one novel I have read by him was River God, at request of my grandfather. I am afraid I found this book awful and I don't care to read any more Wilbur Smith any time soon.
Unfortunately, (or not, depending on how you look at it) I'm somewhat of a history buff and take, very seriously, the accuracy of historical fiction. You can't tell me there was a secret king of England in 1240 that noone knew about and pretended he was his cousin Henry III for 32 years for example; like one novel once tried to tell me. I believe in order to be considered historical fiction, the fiction must be used properly mixed with accurate history. If this is not the case, there's nothing historical about the story and all it is - is fiction.
Wilbur Smith's books are toted as historical fiction. River God for example was about an Egyptian slave who is the best doctor in the known world, oh, who is also the best athlete in the known world, oh, who is also one of the most beautiful people in the known world, oh, who is also one of the most knowledgeable people on exotic animal care and contemporary architecture and building engineering . . . a Slave is all this and more! If anyone wants to know what a slave did for their entire life in ancient Egypt, it amounts to not very much. A pyramid slave spent their entire life from when they were about 8-10 years old to their death at about 30, building a pyramid. Temples and palaces took years to build, sometimes generations, not mere weeks or even months! Slaves had to harvest food for the armies, and the multitude of people clinging to life along the Nile. None could write or read, and very few had a vocabulary of more than 30-40 words. Being a slave in ancient Egypt was a pathetic life. Yet, Wilbur Smith writes of lavishness, plentitude, beauty, love and eroticism.
I'm sure some of his other material is much better and more enjoyable but I found that this one novel has turned me off from him for awhile. I'd rather read real historical fiction by a Michener, Clavell or Rutherford.
Any thoughts are welcome.