GREAT READS FOR SEPTEMBER, 2016.
The Sympathizer, by Viet Thanh Nguyen.
The Captain is young, personable and idealistic: he is also a spy for the Other Side, feeding
the General’s secrets back to his childhood friend Man. He believes in the Revolution and wants it to
succeed; it’s time Vietnam people lived
in freedom and independence, freed from the yolk of French Colonialism and the
spurious and self-serving ‘friendship’ of the United States, the biggest
Colonialist and Capitalist State of them all.
Man has ordered the Captain to escape with the General, so that the new
government of a united Vietnam will have its own intelligence on what the
despised refugees in America are up to, and the Captain’s indispensable
servility is the perfect cover.
Mr Nguyen has the Captain narrate his tale and it soon
becomes clear that he is writing a confession for shadowy captors; nevertheless his confession is as suspenseful
as a thriller, containing equal parts of tragedy and comedy throughout its
length. Characters leap off the page to threaten and beguile the reader,
especially the Captain’s other childhood friend Bon: Man, Bon and the Captain made a pact when
they were young boys, swearing eternal friendship and loyalty to each other and
sealing the oath with a bloody, scarring handshake. The lengths to which Bon
will go to protect and defend his friends are indeed death-defying, not least
because he considers his life over anyway.
His wife and little son were shot to death in the escape from
Saigon. He is now just going through the
motions. If he died tomorrow, who
cares? Certainly not him, so with
suicidal bonhomie, he volunteers to return to Vietnam to mount a counter-revolution
organised by the Captain’s boss.
The Captain is horrified.
He cannot let his true friend go back to certain death on the General’s
half-crazed orders (and against the express instructions of Man). He tells the General that he will go too, so
that he may rescue his friend from his own death wish, fully expecting the
General to excuse them both because of the Captain’s indispensability; unfortunately, the General has decided
otherwise. The Captain has committed the
unpardonable sin of courting Lana, the General’s daughter – ‘if it had been
anyone else that would have been fine’, but the Captain’s ancestry is flung in
his face: you are Eurasian, a
bastard. I cannot have my daughter
associate with ‘someone of your kind’. The Captain is crushed, once again, by
the terrible fact that his beloved mother was seduced as a young girl by a
French Catholic priest. It has mattered
little how many academic or military honours he has achieved throughout his life: his origins will always be shameful. Returning to Vietnam and almost certain death
now seems the only option, made harder by the bitter realisation that the side
for whom he spied so zealously regards him as a traitor, and treats him as
such.
Mr Nguyen has been awarded the 2016 Pulitzer Prize for
fiction for this masterly work, plus a host of other glittering prizes. It is hard to believe that this is his first
novel, for he displays a complete mastery of sentence and imagery that much
more established writers would die for.
He makes the reader think again about that terrible, failed Asian war,
and its effects still being felt more than forty years later. SIX STARS!
The
History of Blood, by Paul Mendelson
Colonel Vaughn de Vries joins us again, more rumpled and
disillusioned than ever in this third story (see review below) of his battles
against crime – within and without – the South African Police Service. The criminals on the street are
straightforward, relatively easy adversaries compared to the daily skirmishes
he has with the ‘higher-ups’ in his department;
he is constantly admonished by his friend and immediate superior Hendrik
du Toit to preserve the status quo; to
keep below the parapet – don’t make waves!
For they are both white and Afrikaner, and the Rainbow Nation is too recent
an entity for their new black bureaucracy not to scream ‘racism!’ and
‘apartheid!’ at any questioning of efficiency or department inaction. De Vries is one of those rare birds who is on
the side of the victim of whatever colour, of whichever crime he is
investigating; he will be their
champion, mourn their deaths and bring them justice, pure and simple.
Which is why he feels particularly sour and increasingly
frustrated by the blatant obfuscation and lack of co-operation of various
departments when he investigates the apparent suicide of a young woman in a
seedy motel near the airport. The
post-mortem reveals dozens of tiny packages of cocaine in her gut, and a
package she wrapped and swallowed herself, containing a note: ‘ I can’t go
back.’ She came from a rich family; her late father was a politician who was
assassinated when she was three years old and she was raised by his brother,
her uncle; now she lies dead in a seedy
room, hours before being compelled to fly to Thailand as a drug mule.
The more de Vries digs into the mystery of her suicide
and the person who induced her to swallow the cocaine, messier (predictably)
and more evil crimes are exposed;
people-trafficking and prostitution are mild compared to blackmail and
the indiscriminate, ruthless murder of anyone even remotely threatening to the
anonymous, powerful criminals who have built themselves an empire with links to
the very top echelons of the South African legal system. De Vries now understands why he is told so
consistently to leave things be, especially when his own precious daughters are
dragged into the picture and threatened with a long, slow death. Never has he felt so vengeful – or so
powerless.
Once again Mr Mendelson takes the reader on a breakneck
ride through the wonderful African countryside with de Vries as, with heart in
mouth (‘I’m too old – I’m not fit enough for this!’) he pursues a clever,
relentless and ruthless enemy, one for whom the torture and death de Vries’s
daughters would be an amusing and momentary diversion from the business of
making big money. De Vries has to stop
him permanently, but how?
There is no rest for the Wicked (or the Righteous) – or
the reader! - until this tale is told:
Mr Mendelson has produced another page-turner, with subplots and (with
the exception of one or two) minor characters as satisfying as ever, and once
again his novel’s setting is a major delight.
FIVE STARS.
The First Rule of Survival, by Paul Mendelson
Colonel of the South
African Police Service Vaughn de Vries is a typical protagonist of classic
crime fiction. Suffering Burn-out? Of course.
Marriage down the tubes?
Naturally. Finding solace in
Alcohol? Goes without saying. Appearance less than inviting? Women ‘avert their eyes when they see him
sitting at the bar’.
In short, Colonel de Vries’s life is rather less than
satisfactory – except when he is working:
his job is ‘what gets him up in the morning’, and his passion for
justice is legendary; it is what
elevates him above the norm, especially in respect of his colleagues, new
examples of the integrated police force of Mandela’s Rainbow Nation, all vying
for power and prestige in a department formerly run by white men like de Vries,
whose time must surely soon be up. They
hope. Yes, give him a bit more time and
he will be the author of his own misfortune …… until the naked bodies of two
malnourished teenaged boys are found in a skip at the back of a farm café miles
from Capetown, de Vries’s base. They
have been murdered, and Vaughn, the token white officer is sent to investigate
– and finds to his horror that they are the victims of a terrible abduction
seven years before, when three young white boys, one the son of a serving
police officer, were kidnapped on three consecutive days, never to be seen
again.
It is a case that has haunted Vaughn’s dreams, turned
them into nightmares and destroyed his peace of mind forever, especially when
the case becomes cold after months of searching fruitlessly for clues – any
clue – as to their fate. Now, two of the
three kidnap victims have been found, obviously transported to the skip after
death – from where? And where is the
third boy? de Vries and his immediate
superior Hendrik du Toit faced unprecedented contempt from the media and
eminent child psychologists alike for their inability to provide answers seven
years ago: now, their new bosses are
demanding bold actions and quick solutions to the murders; any delay will reflect badly on the new
Rainbow police hierarchy. Those dinosaur
Boers Messrs du Toit and de Vries better shape up or ship out.
British writer Paul Mendelson has constructed an
impressive debut thriller for his first foray into crime writing. He has created credible, excellent characters
– especially Vaughn’s black second-in-command Warrant Officer Don February, so
called because his real name would be impossible for most people to pronounce –
and his descriptions of the wild and splendid coastline and croplands around
Capetown make one feel that they are riding shotgun with Vaughn de Vries and
Don February, hanging over their shoulders, exhorting them to find the killers
before more children are abused and killed.
This is a page-turner par excellence, made the more
readable by its magnificent setting. FIVE STARS!!
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