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Banks heroine, Hannah Musgrave, is not a woman at ease with herself. Others might be happy with supportive parents and enthusiastic lovers, but Hannah finds that their blandishments do not plug the gap in her life. She abandons her comfortable middle-class existence and plunges into the dark terrorist world of the ruthless group known as the Weather Underground. Soon she is on the run from the FBI and takes refuge in Liberia in West Africa. It seems that her life will now change forever, as she marries a youthful politician and adopts the role of wife (and even mother). In the past, Hannah's life had been at threat from her own, internal forces, but now she finds that it is her environment which is the powder keg. The ruthless and corrupt military state which is Liberia (long shored up by America) is about to be plunged into massive bloodshed, and Hannah finds that all she has come to hold dear is at risk.
This is powerful and far-reaching writing, on a scale that few novelists (on either side of the Atlantic) are prepared to tackle today. The nearest modern equivalent to this epic novel of character, set against a seething backdrop is probably the work of Robert Stone, but the shade of Graham Greene is often evoked, and not to Banks' discredit. The conflicted heroine is a wonderful creation, and the turbulent dangerous world of war-torn Liberia is brilliantly evoked. -- Barry Forshaw --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
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But that recommendation comes with the caveat that there are probably aspects of this book that most readers won't like. There's gonna be something that rubs you the wrong way. I'm sure that's no secret to Mr. Banks himself. For example, Hannah is sort of hard to sympathize with. She's not a very nice person. She's willing to abandon many people in her life - including her parents and her children, and in a larger sense she abandons (or tries to) her country. She's conflicted about this stuff, but she still does it. It's hard to know also how she really feels about Africans. On one hand she marries and has children with a Liberian, but on the other hand she hardly seems in love with him. It's almost like events and circumstance propel her though life. If she expresses unconditional love it's for her monkeys, her "dreamers" - rather than actual people. It leaves me unsure how to read it all. Which might be what literature is all about. No easy answers to any of the issues raised here. No winners or loosers. Just people stumbling through life with many tragic consequences.
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