I finished The Last Hundred Days, by Patrick McGuinness, a couple of days ago, and I have to admit, I am struggling a little with what to write about it. It's not that it is a bad book, it's just that I didn't find it particularly memorable ... which I'm not sure whether is a little damning for me or the book! And even now I'm being distracted by the sudden hail storm happening outside my window ... March is definitely going out with a bang in the UK! The story is narrated by a recent university graduate, who finds himself being offered a job at Bucharest University, despite the fact he hasn't actually had an interview. He takes the job and soon finds himself mixed up with the corruption and politics of the last few months of 1989, when communist dictator, Nicolae Ceausescu was desperately holding onto power within Romania. Very much in the shadow of the previous incumbent of both the job and the flat he is living in, he is befriended by the larger than life Leo, who is a bit of a wheeler-dealer black marketeer, with a hand in many pies, but whose main focus of attention is to try and keep a record of the fantastic buildings in the city which are being systematically destroyed, only to be replaced by grey, miserable and poorly built blocks of concrete. The country is broke, but not according to the propaganda output by Ceausescu, a communist who would have made Stalin proud! As the weeks go by, the country slowly disintegrates and our narrator is swept up in the chaos and characters. There is brutality, fear, food shortages, back-handers and treachery all around, but never does our narrator want to leave the country, despite everyone telling him he should do so. I think I found the narrator way too passive ... he just seemed to let stuff happen, not initiating nor even having a strong opinion on anything much. Perhaps this way a deliberate ploy to enable the author to paint such vivid characters and action around him, without the narrator getting in the way ... thus he was able to shine a light on the last days of a horrible regime that ruled with an iron fist without the narrator getting in the way. I read the audio book which was ably voiced by Cameron Stewart. Others have given this book 5 star reviews and it was long listed for the Man Booker Prize, but I'm a bit ambivalent towards it, and I feel slightly guilty about that.
My STAR rating: THREE.
Length: 356 print pages.
Price I paid: £3.99.
Formats available: print; unabridged audio download; ebook.
No comments:
Post a Comment