I have never had the opportunity to hunt anything, but I am a birder, and an avid book collector. Out of a library of 3500 volumes, I have about 1200 sporting books of which about 1000 are Africa and India hunting books. Pig sticking books are a specialty of mine.
I started early with Corbett around age 7 and during my working years I bought as many as I could afford. Safari Press and I 'grew up' together. I loved John Burger's Horned Death, one of their early reissues. People at work thought I was a strange lady reading these wonderful books. I am retired now so can't buy as many as before, but I did amass a sporting collection with an eye toward retirement. My local library in Brooklyn is the main branch of the Brooklyn Public Library, but African hunting books are scarce. At one time they kepts a huge reference section of rare, rebound 799 books. I would spend hours there reading them. Now they are all gone. I have seen one or two crop up on eBay but way beyond my pay grade.
My favourite African hunting books are Hemingway's Green Hills of Africa, Ruark's Horn of the Hunter, JA Hunter's Hunter, Neumann's Elephant Hunting in East Equatorial Africa, Bell's Wanderings of an Elephant Hunter (and the Safari Press special editions) ,Roosevelt's African Game Trails, James Sutherland's Adventures of an Elephant Hunter, John Taylor's Pondoro, and Ian Nyschens' Months of the Sun. This last is probably the finest Africana literature ever issued by Safari Press (along with the Bell books). It gives you a true feel for the last days of old Africa. I was fortunate enough to get the Safari Press African Country series as they were first issued. I used to buy two with my tax refund every year! They were kind enough to reserve my book number. These books are excellent reading if you can get your hands on them. The Amwell Press African Big Five series are also excellent. I could go on and on. I love my bedroom with the wall of beautiful books, all of them on hunting.
Few things are more satisfying than a personal library tailored to one's own interests. Books are truly permanent pleasures. It's even better when you come across a book that reminds you of a place you visited in Africa. Jock of the Bushveld Trail, the Lebombo Hills (Haunts of Wild Game by Fitzpatrick), Leopards of the Luangwa, Mountain Nyala in Ethiopia, etc. At the Bale Mountains National Park HQ I actually "drew a bead" - with a stick ! - on a gigantic Mountain Nyala and a dark beast of a Menelik's Bushbuck! Ha! I always wonder how many hunters would love to get that close to such a rare trophy. Even if they have to imagine taking it. The local Ethiopian guide was very amused by my childish antics!