On an imaginary island in the Pacific, a rebellion takes place; the
goal of the rebels is to overthrow the island’s occupying power identified as
the Empire and to capture Ø Com’s outer station, the location of the Empire’s entire
wireless operations.
The points of view of two women are given. Lota is a young revolutionary who has come
under the spell of Kurtz, an older woman who leads the rebels. Rachel is the First Secretary of the Empire’s
embassy on the island. Lota describes
events from the inside of the rebel group as she takes part in the
insurgency. Rachel, who is looking
forward to her last day of work at the embassy before she returns to the
Capital to join her husband and their daughter who fled the island after
escalating racial tensions, is taken captive.
In many ways this book is a modern retelling of Heart of Darkness. Like
Conrad’s novel, it examines the hypocrisy of imperialism. “The island was an independent nation, but
everyone knew that all the real decisions were made by the capital - and . . .
by Ø.” There are suggestions of “the Empire’s involvement
in the forced rendition of illegally held prisoners.” Kurtz maintains that on the island, there is “’a
top-secret heavily guarded black site, home to roughly sixty-five of the Empire’s
most-wanted terrorist suspects, political prisoners, and other detainees.”
The style of the novel I found to be tedious. The constant use of the em dash becomes annoying: Rachel felt – as she had so often that fall –
backed into a corner” and “It was useless to think about any of this now. She’d had no other choice at the time – or she’d
felt that way, which amounted to the same thing. If she’d changed her mind and made a fuss –
pressed for an immediate reassignment – she’d have looked impulsive, even
unstable, difficult to please” and “She moved – following Baby Jane this time –
toward the embassy doors. If she couldn’t
feel as she had this morning – as if she’d entered, or was just about to enter,
the future itself – she might at least, she thought, focus on the here and now.” Parentheses are also overused: “Here she was (the lump stuck; Lota blinked
back a swell of hot tears), surrounded by history” and “That was the thing with
intelligence, though, she reminded herself (drawing mostly from what she’d
learned from TV)” and “The same relief she’d felt just a moment ago as she (Yes!) had given in, too, allowing – no,
inviting – the past to simply slip away.”
Some sections of the book are difficult to follow: “Lota gripped the seatback tighter. Yes, she thought. What was any revolution, therefore, but this? Yes, this. Despite her personal doubts and
misgivings. The revolution – the future –
was this. Was Kurtz drumming her hand on the dash. Was the sound of her voice as it beat out the
time. Was – Yes! This island. This air.
Was yes this water. This dirt, this van, this rutted road.”
No one seems to know what anyone feels:
“A wave – first of horror and then of intense desire – passed over
her. And then (because she was suddenly
unsure which feeling was which, or if the two feelings were actually one) she
was hit by a still more powerful wave of confusion” and “Rachel watched as the
woman’s expression changed slowly, betraying – What? Confusion, certainly. Anger.
Fear. And . . . something
else. A sort of (or was this only a
projection?) instinctive, physical relief.”
This book didn’t do anything for me; I found myself wondering
how much more I had to read to reach the end.
Perhaps I was not in the right frame of mind for the book or
perhaps it’s just too esoteric for me.
Note: I received a digital galley from the publisher via NetGalley.
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