Too Late the Phalarope is the second novel of Alan Paton, the South African author who is best known for writing Cry, the Beloved Country.
The summary on the dust jacket of the first UK edition reads, in part; 'The setting is again South Africa, but the tragedy this time is of a white man who, for complicated reasons, some of them not unconnected with his childhood and training, succumbs to the very temptations he might have been thought strong enough to resist.
His downfall is recorded by his father's sister who watched the train of events, half foreseeing the danger yet unable to prevent it, and now in anguish blames herself.
The literary critic Alfred Kazin reviewed the novel for The New York Times: "What is best in this novel (a Book-of-the-Month Club selection for August) is the atmosphere Mr. Paton conveys of the sultry, brooding tension in South Africa itself - that "heartless land" as the writer James Stern once called it...One understands better, after reading this novel, the hysterical abruptness and open threats that increasingly mark Dr Malan's public pronouncements; one sees all too well the self-deception of a master class which lives on the labor of a vast native population it has condemned to virtual peonage, and which defends itself against its own guilt by living shut up inside a cult of blood and race 'purity'.
"[2] Orville Prescott also wrote about the novel for The New York Times: "it is a considerable achievement also, pitiful, dramatic and psychologically interesting.