Winner of the WH Smith "Travel Book of the Year" Award, this collection of four short stories, two essays, and a novella, explores the plight of contemporary Sudan. Under the auspices of The Daily Telegraph, seven well known writers were sent to southern Sudan to witness the ravages of the long-running civil war, which has claimed around a million and a half lives over the last fifteen years. The two main points readers will take away is a sense of the inexorable schism between the Muslim north and the non-Muslim south, and the exacerbating effect of international oil company operations in the south.
Each of the four short stories reflects the individual author's style: Alex (The Beach, The Tesseract) Garland's "R.S.S." is a creepy story of two boys, the well-known newspaperman W. F. Deedes' debut piece of fiction is old-fashioned, Giles (The Last King of Scotland, Ladysmith) Foden's "Weekenders" is a politically aware drama of aid workers, and Andrew O'Hagan's "Fish River" is an unsettling first-person depiction of the real-life slavers that operate in Sudan. That said, they are a bit thematically repetitive. On their own, each might have shone a bit brighter, but since the writers all went to the same area for a very brief visit, they're all drawing on the same brief impressions for inspiration.
The two nonfiction pieces are biographer/novelist's Victoria Glendinning's surprisingly thoughtful critique of humanitarian NGO operations in southern Sudan, and humorist Tony (Round Ireland With A Fridge, Playing the Moldovans at Tennis) Hawk's bumbling attempt to write a song with some locals. Glendinning's is a worthy antidote to knee-jerk charity responses to conflict, and Hawk's is a hilarious welcome respite from the grimness of the rest of the book. By far the longest piece is Irvine (Trainspotting, Filth, et al) Welsh's 140+ page novella "Contamination." It's similar to much of his work in that the story delves deep into the dark side of human nature, however his vivd imagination and language are largely absent. Instead, there's a very straightforward account of the struggle between two warring tribes to control a village, and the horrors that struggle brings to wide swath of innocents. It's not bad, it's just not the Welsh you might expect. Altogether, the book offers little in the way of hope for the future, and no prescriptions for change, but it is a worthy attempt to bring the general public's attention to an ugly civil war.