Wednesday 27 November 2019

#Blogtour - The Pursuit of William Abbey by Claire North

A hauntingly powerful novel about how the choices we make can stay with us forever, by the award-winning author of The First Fifteen Lives of Harry August and 84K.
South Africa in the 1880s. A young and naive English doctor by the name of William Abbey witnesses the lynching of a local boy by the white colonists. As the child dies, his mother curses William.
William begins to understand what the curse means when the shadow of the dead boy starts following him across the world. It never stops, never rests. It can cross oceans and mountains. And if it catches him, the person he loves most in the world will die.
Gripping, moving, and utterly thought-provoking, this novel proves once again that Claire North is one of the most innovative voices in modern fiction.
It has taken us nearly thirty years to conquer the world, and when there was nothing left to take, it sounded a starting gun whose shot echoed from Verdun to the Somme. That is the truth of it.
THE PURSUIT OF WILLIAM ABBEY is the story of a Great War Doctor who, over the course of two evenings in a trench hospital just behind the lines, relates a strange tale to a nurse. As Abbey talks to Sister Ellis we hear the fantastic story of his cursing by the mother of a boy whose lynching he witnessed without intervening. William did not take part but he stood by. Since then he has been pursued by the shade of the boy, Langa. When Langa gets close Abbey can read the true thoughts of those around him, indeed is compelled to utter these truths aloud; should Langa catch up, Abbey’s loved ones will die.
What follows is a thrilling adventure story as Abbey travels the world always trying to keep ahead of the boy. He encounters others with the curse, is discovered by, and tries to escape from, a shady British intelligence agency who want to harness his ‘gift’, and tries not to fall in love... Claire North is an incredibly talented and versatile author; one pulse-racing and cinematic chase through New York in particular is the match of any of the masters. The rhythm, the pacing of the novel as a whole is astounding. But this is so much more than a thriller.
The logic of it was inescapable. Even if France had little interest in the mud mosques of Djenné, it had to plant its flag in Mali before the Belgians could. Though the British were hardly concerned with Sudan, they needed to stake a claim before the Germans, to protect Egypt. What was Morocco, save a territory at threat from the Italians? What were Madagascar, Nigeria, Guinea; Portuguese East Africa, Libya, Eritrea — why, they were all countries that another Great Power might claim if you didn't claim them first. Peace in Europe hung by a thread, no power ready to move against its neighbour for fear of losing the fight, Conquest, the butchery of the world beyond Europe's mountains, kept the peace — at least for a little while.
North has written a scathing indictment of colonialism and empire, of the ‘great men’ for whom common men are resources, ‘just another Tommy’ to be used up, other races animals to be rounded up or exterminated. As one character says,
“We found truth-speakers, yes. Primitive peoples in the deserts of Australia, or the jungles of central Africa. People who barely understood elementary concepts, and could not cooperate fully with our aims.”

THE PURSUIT OF WILLIAM ABBEY is a masterpiece. The novel defies genre, at times a spy thriller, an adventure story, a horror story, and as the narrator is essentially Sister Ellis, who relates Abbey’s words as he in turn tells others’ truths, the suspicion that we are listening to one or more unreliable narrators only makes the real truth of colonialism and warfare all the more effective. Intricately plotted, breathless, exhausting and heartbreaking. 
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Sunday 17 November 2019

Review: Death in the East

Death in the East Death in the East by Abir Mukherjee
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

DEATH IN THE EAST is the fourth, and possibly the best to date, in Abir Mukherjee’s Raj-set Wyndham and Banerjee mysteries. The story alternates between 1922 India and 1905 London as Sam Wyndham, who, in an attempt to finally kick the opium addiction with which he has struggled through the previous three books in the series, has travelled to an ashram in remote Assam. An event on the way causes him to recall the earlier events when, as an inexperienced and rash bobby on the East End beat he investigated a violent attack on, and subsequent murder of, a young woman of his acquaintance.
In truth the two narratives initially seem unconnected and the intriguing 1905 London mystery feels a little broken up by the 1922 story of Sam’s ‘cure’ but around the two thirds mark the stories collide in startling fashion and the novel resolves very satisfyingly. Along the way there are chillingly atmospheric meetings in crime-ridden, dark London backstreets, two locked-room puzzles, an Agatha Christie-like examination of suspects and a significant change in the relationship between Captain Wyndham and Sergeant Banerjee.
As in previous novels, Mukherjee comments on the racism, the subtle and unconscious as well as the overt, of the English, particularly of the upper classes, against those who are ‘different’ be it the Jewish immigrant population in London or the native Indian ‘blithely dismissing the fact that this was his country and we were the foreigners in it.’ Unfortunately, things are not noticeably different a century later.

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#BlogTour - Still See You Everywhere by Lisa Gardner

A remote tropical island. Countless dangerous secrets. No way to call help. ‘A  master of the thriller  genre’ David Baldacci ‘Full-on  acti...