The Mūthaiga Country Club is described in
Beryl Markham's 1942 memoir
West with the Night: "'Na Kupa Hati M'zuri' (I Bring You Good Fortune) was, in my time, engraved in the stone of its great fireplace. Its broad lounge, its bar, its dining-room—none so elaborately furnished as to make a rough-handed hunter pause at its door, nor yet so dowdy as to make a diamond pendant swing ill at ease—were rooms in which the people who made the Africa I knew danced and talked and laughed, hour after hour."
Evelyn Waugh describes the Mūthaiga Country Club in his 1931 travel book
Remote People (also included in the anthology
When the Going Was Good). Whilst Waugh was unable to find accommodation on the premises, he discovered, upon his arrival in Nairobi, to be already a temporary member, as he had been registered by the secretary of the club who knew about his arrival. The club is featured in
Lucinda Riley's 2019 novel
The Sun Sister, the sixth book in the author's
The Seven Sisters series. The club is also mentioned in
Ernest Hemingway's short story "The Short Happy Life of Francis Macomber", a story centered around big game hunting in Kenya. ==See also==