80BOOK REVIEWSThe Korsten lasketmakers: A Study of the Masowe Apostles . , . By CM,Dillon-Malone, S.J. Manchester, Manchester Univ. Press for The Institute forAfrican Studies, Univ. of Zambia, 1978, xi, 169pp.» £7.50.This brief study, based upon the author's Fordham University doctorate of 1976, isprimarily concerned with religious beliefs and structure, but is limited by itsreliance GO a single grouping for its evidence in a movement that is bothgeographically widespread through southern and eastern African and rent byinternal divisions. However, like Jules-Rosette's study of the Vapostori (AfricanApostles, 1975) it usefully helps fill some of the gaps left by Daneel's concentrationon the more southern parts of Shorn country. The book is particularly welcome inits use of archival material for the early years of Johane Masowe but the history ofthe sect's return to Southern Rhodesia in 1962 is patchy; it can, however, besupplemented by reference to D. Munjeri's article (inNADA (1978), XI, (v), 497-509).R.S.R.Jack Grant's Story By G.C. Grant Guildford, Lutterwortfa Press, 1980, x,198pp., £5.95.This autobiography of 'Jack* Grant was edited by Cecil Northcott, and has aforeword by Alan Patoe and an epilogue by Garfield ToddŠa distinguished trio ofwitnesses to Grant's lifelong involvement in missionary work and thereby, becauselie lived in South Africa and Rhodesia, political activity. As the descendant of awealthy West Indian family and as a great cricketer he was an unlikely candidatefor prohibited-immigrant status in RhodesiaŠas indeed was Ms wife, the daughterof Sir Fraser Russell, a Chief Justice of Southern Rhodesia.In Zimbabwe today Jack Grant is remembered for Ms fund-raising activitiesfor Christian Care, which supported detainees and their families, and Ms help toCold Comfort Farm and numerous university students.R.S.R.Zimbabwe's Inheritance. Edited by C, Sioneman, Salisbury, The College Presswith Macmillan, 1981, xii, 234 pp., bibl., index, ZS8.95.This book has a busy editor who contributes to four of the ten chapters. The aim ofthe book Is to describe key aspects of Zimbabwe's Inheritance, these beingorganized into two areas, socio-political and economic, each taking broadly equalshares, The authors, however, attempt to piwlde more than a presentation of thestate of the State for Independence in 1980; there is also a helpful and detailedanalysis of historical de¥•lopment and, although it is the professed aim of the editorto avoid prescriptions or recommendations for the future, few of the authors canresist their own radical solutions to Inherent problems. All this is, I think, quiteinteresting for the reader and places this took as a collection of Independenceessays by authors concerned for the future of Zimbabwe.There is throughout the book a thematic approach which blends together thechapters which might otherwise have been quite disparate. The theme is one ofBlack pGYertj and growing inequality as measured against the wealth, income andstatus of the White settlers. The theme Is essentially political and more