Strangers in Port-au-Prince are united in the corruption, fear, and
revolt of Duvalier-era Haiti in "the most interesting novel of
[Greene's] career" ( The Nation ). Haiti, under the rule of Papa Doc
and his menacing paramilitary, the Tontons Macoute, has long been
abandoned by tourists. Now it is home to corrupt capitalists, foreign
ambassadors and their lonely wives—and a small group of enterprising
strangers rocking into port on the Dutch cargo ship, Medea: a
well-meaning pair of Americans claiming to bring vegetarianism to the
natives; a former jungle fighter in World War II Burma and current
confidence man; and an English hotelier returning home to the Trianon,
an unsalable shell of an establishment on the hills above the capital.
Each is embroiled in a charade. But when they're unsuspectingly bound
together in this nightmare republic of squalid poverty, torrid love
affairs, and impending violence, their masks will be stripped away.
"While Mr. Greene . . . specialized in chronicling the moral and
political murkiness he encountered in the third world . . . nowhere
did he produce a more topical or damning work of fiction than [in The
Comedians]" ( The New York Times). Banned in Haiti, and condemned by
Papa Doc Duvalier, it was adapted by Greene into a 1967 film starring
Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton. Praise for Graham Greene "A
masterly storyteller." — Newsweek "In a class by himself . . . The
ultimate chronicler of twentieth-century man's consciousness and
anxiety." —William Golding, Nobel Prize–winning author of Lord of
the Flies "One of the finest writers of any language." — The
Washington Post
Les mer
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781504052511
Publisert
2018
Utgiver
Open Road Integrated Media, Inc.
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter