Saturday, 24 December 2022

The Captain and the Enemy - short but full of longing

The Captain and the Enemy is Graham Greene's final novel. It involves a young boy called Victor, who is collected from boarding school by an enigmatic stranger known as The Captain and taken to lunch, during which he is told that The Captain has won him from his father in a game of backgammon. Victor is excited to leave his dull school, and his unpleasant aunt with whom he has lived since his mother's death. The Captain takes him to London to live with the sweet but nervy Lisa, in an almost derelict house. Victor reinvents himself as "Jim" and stays with Lisa while The Captain mysteriously comes and goes, always with the whiff of criminal activity hovering around him. Despite him being absent more than he is present, Jim is fascinated by The Captain. When Lisa meets with an accident, Jim sets off for Panama to find The Captain and becomes embroiled in the mystery of who or what this dodgy benefactor is. Involving espionage, smuggling and jewel theft, this short novel is packed with mystery and shady characters, but is also full of longing - a longing for a father figure, for love, and a lost childhood. The Captain may remain a bit of an enigma, and the ending came as a bit of a shock, but this is a novel that has deep feelings and is beautifully written. I read the audio edition, narrated by Sir Kenneth Branagh, which was an absolute delight!

My STAR rating: FOUR stars.

Length: 192 print pages.

Price I paid: £2.98.

Formats available: print; unabridged audio download; audio cassette; ebook.

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