Friday, 4 March 2016

The Girl Who Saved The King of Sweden - bright and breezy

For fans of Jonas Jonasson, who gave us The Hundred-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out of The Window and Disappeared, this is a chance to sit back and let a master story teller take you on another long and involved journey that ultimately ends in deep satisfaction. In The Girl Who Saved The King of Sweden, we follow the life of Nombeko Mayeki, a poor girl from the slums of Soweto who is determined to use her brain and make her life better. Unfortunately, it seems that the world has other ideas when she is run over by a drunken engineer. She survives, but in the South Africa of the 1970's, she is blamed for the accident and is sent to work for the engineer as a cleaner. It turns out that despite his complete incompetence, this man is in charge of South Africa's nuclear bomb project. When Nombeko demonstrates her capacity for learning, she outstrips the capabilities of everyone around her, and ends up keeping the project on track just enough to keep herself alive. When seven bombs are made instead of six, Nombeko does everything she can to avoid the extra one falling into the wrong hands ... foiling Mossad along the way and ending up in Sweden ... with the bomb. Surrounded by incompetent people that seem to gravitate towards her, she is thwarted at almost every turn to resolve the situation. Along the way she grapples with anarchists, prime ministers, the King of Sweden and she also falls in love. This is an epic tale, full of humour and observations on the human condition in all its ridiculousness, and it is a joy to read. The situations are ludicrous and the people all need some serious help, but you can't help but be glad that you have spent some time in their company. Let yourself go along for the ride and you won't be disappointed.

My STAR rating: FIVE.

Length: 421 print pages.
Price I paid: Borrowed from my brother.
Formats available: print; audio CD; unabridged audio download; ebook.

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