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A Journey of Promise
 
 
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A Journey of Promise [Paperback]

Holly, Nurse
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
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Product details

  • Paperback: 114 pages
  • Publisher: iUniverse (17 Jan 2007)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0595420311
  • ISBN-13: 978-0595420315
  • Product Dimensions: 22.9 x 15.2 x 0.7 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

Product Description

Product Description

A Journey of Promise is a fictitious story about a young woman called Gillian Honey. Having outgrown her rural life experiences in Promise, she seeks development elsewhere. Her journey, focused around a nursing career, takes her from the rural suburbs of Guyana to urban city life in Georgetown, and thereon to London. The story shows the rich and diverse community of Promise and a young woman up against life's pitfalls, challenges and highs. Gillian's tour begins and ends in Guyana against the background of the changing 1970s era, depicting and comparing new ideologies with old ones, showing how they affect her life.

About the Author

Born in London, Holly Nurse spent much of her childhood in Guyana. She graduated in English Literature at the University of Surrey and worked mainly as a civil servant. She was selected in a poetry competition for publication by The Poetry Guild in the 1998 anthology, Everlasting Dreams!

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
On coming of age, Gillian learns from her kindly parents that she was born a boy. Disgusted at this "deceit" and no longer certain of her identity, Gillian joins the Guyanan Air Force, whose Air Vice-Marshal strives to free men from Time: the present, past - AND the future. Gillian certainly wants to free herself from her past, so throws herself whole-heartedly into the fascistic Air Force, which comes, on government authority, to take over the village of Georgetown.

In a series of memorable episodes, Ms Nurse shows the villagers falling under the thrall of the Aerodrome. Their essential decency cannot compete with the unprincipled thuggery of the Air Force. Their sense of dislocation is mirrored by Gillian's gradual discovery of her true parentage. Georgetown, it seems, is awash with adultery and inter-relatedness. More grist to the Air Vice-Marshal's views on human weakness - and to Gillian's disgust at the village. Highly comic, though, to the reader, as he/she surveys the twists and turns of the plot.

Fascism, democracy, Right, Left - these are never explicitly mentioned. The politics are illuminated through the characters, whose motives drive the plot. In contrast to "1984", there are no long and boring disquisitions on the political system.

Though the Air Vice-Marshal is undoubtedly fascistic, he is no mere Hitler- or Mussolini-clone; race is never mentioned - the AVM's own very personal obsessions inform his political ideals. However, this emotionally stunted man has a deep affection for Gillian, and with good reason. Nothing here is quite as it seems on the surface, and both the AVM and the Rector have unexpected histories!

Though Gillian eventually rejects the methods and aims of the AVM, she never loses a sense of admiration for that enigmatic and charismatic man. The novel's refusal to condemn the Air Force in black-and-white terms gives it an ambiguity and generosity which rescues it from the didactic, hectoring spirit of "1984". That we come to condemn the Air Force while learning to understand its superficial attractions is a measure of the subtlety of the narrative and the humanity of it characters.

Where the Air Force despises human weakness and human love, the novel depicts both with tender understanding. Its prose is beautifully crafted without ever being stiff. It has everything I expect of a novel: plot, pace, character and local colour, all intelligently interlinked; it is thought-provoking, intelligent, insightful of both fascism and human nature, and yet is highly entertaining and readable, encompassing both comedy and tragedy. It sets up its own convincing world of a highly idiosyncratic but very Guyanan fascism and draws us into it. This a very substantial and satisfying novel and work of art, which in essence celebrates the fundamental decency of Guyanan values.
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