This is a truly remarkable first novel. In it Roma Tearne has managed
to combine a fast moving and exciting story with the most splendid
evocation of tropical Sri Lanka in the context of a war which is as
relevant today as it was several years ago. The story powerfully
gripping, and few people will be able to put it down once they begin
it. The narrative builds slowly and lyrically at first but then
starts to move along with and almost vertiginous speed producing
surprising and arresting twists and turns. The story is set mainly in
the author's native Sri Lanka, with its dense, wet forests, its long
open beaches, its turquoise seas and its vividly coloured plants. The
characters pass their life in what should be an Edenic world but the
shadow of war falls across the land as it falls, too, across the
lives of the characters. Without warning this fertile and burgeoning
world is split open and the exotic idyll is disturbed in the most
violent and unexpected way. The conflict is, of course, the same one
which breeds death and destruction in Sri Lanka today, the civil war
which broke out between the Tamils and the Singhalese after the
withdrawal of British rule in 1945. According to the book jacket it
was this struggle which forced author's parents to flee the island in
the 1960s, and the incidents have clearly made an indelible
impression on the child's imagination.
The dominant impression of reading this book involves light and
colour, of shade, of dark and of half-light. For many years Roma
Tearne has been a painter and her sensitivity to the subtle nuances
of colour makes itself felt on every page. It was this aspect of the
writing which is most impressive. Roma Tearne's command of language
is economic, flexible and vivid. This is not a book that that has
been written in haste. Every sentence has been weighed not just for
its sense, but for its rhythm, its stresses and for the nuance of
each word that goes to make it up. The pleasures for the reader of
'Mosquito' are enormous and though the ending moved me to tears, I
still did not want the story to end.