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Please Do Not Disturb

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
A funny, disturbing, and deeply affecting novel of power, corruption, and innocence in colonial Africa, by the author of Terms & Conditions.
As the African nation of Bwalo prepares for The Big Day—the only day in the year the ailing King talks to his subjects—we meet five very different people:
Charlie, a curious boy with a dangerous dictaphone habit, eavesdrops on the eccentric guests of the Mirage Hotel.
Sean, an Irishman who's given his heart (and the best part of his liver) to Bwalo, struggles to write the great African novel—if only his crazed fiancée and fierce thirst would stop distracting him.
Josef, the mythmaker and kingmaker who paved the way for Tafumo's rise to power, starts to hear the ominous rattle of skeletons in his closet.
Hope, the nurse caring for the King, keeps the old man alive, maintaining the façade of the powerful ruler as she mourns her own broken dreams.
And in the countdown to the Big Day, storm clouds gather as a petty criminal, Jack, smuggles something into Bwalo—specifically to the Mirage Hotel—that will change the lives of all of them forever.
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    • Kirkus

      September 15, 2016
      In colonial Africa, everyone has their reasons.Glancy's (Terms and Conditions, 2014) panoramic portrait of the small African country of Bwalo works a sneaky charm as its political-thriller plot clicks together with the inevitability of a bad dream: the expats and natives who congregate at Bwalo's Mirage Hotel are sharply drawn, multidimensional characters whose clashing perspectives and complicated personal histories provide a rich, often amusing context for the tragic (and tragically familiar) corrupting influence of power. Glancy employs a shifting point of view structure with characters (including a curious young boy, a dissolute Irish professor, and an embittered government minister) narrating chapters in turn as each prepares for "The Big Day," the annual occasion on which Bwalo's revered King Tafumo addresses his subjects. As Tafumo, a once brilliant and idealistic reformer, declines into senility and paranoia--and his administration, with its sinister secret police force, grows increasingly draconian--a violent plot unfolds to again bring revolution to Bwalo. Glancy deftly limns the hollowness of that promise through the lived-in, wholly authentic-feeling observations of his disparate cast, locating the political in the intensely personal. The author's understanding of psychology and ear for distinctive dialogue make it easy to forgive some narrative clunkiness--naming a nurse "Hope" and a closeted hip-hop star "Truth" may be a little on the nose--and his mastery of the story's tricky tone, simultaneously amused and horrified by human folly, prevents the novel from slipping into a bathetic lament or cynical joke. Richly layered, mordantly funny, and graced by compassion, Glancy's determinedly small-scale take on revolution and the death of dreams consistently seduces and delights.

      COPYRIGHT(2016) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      October 1, 2016
      The tiny African nation of Bwalo is preparing for Big Day, the annual celebration of national pride. Trees are trimmed, and even the rocks are painted, but while its facade is being refreshed, the country's underpinnings threaten to fall apart. The aging king, Tafumo, is slipping into senility. Josef, the man who helped Tafumo rise, and the only one who knows his deepest secrets, is barely holding on to sanity himself. At the Mirage hotel, the manager's son, Charlie, runs wild, while the locals gather at the bar to share expectations and frustrations, and the staff gears up to welcome important visitors with the proper pomp. But not all the locals are excited, and not all the visitors are friendly. As Big Day nears, plots of varying scope and intent begin to coalesce, guaranteed to change life in the tiny country forever. Glancy (Terms and Conditions, 2014) uses multiple narrators and a large cast of characters to create an authentic feeling of confusion that is slowly and neatly reconciled as this satire draws to an exciting and surprising close.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2016, American Library Association.)

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