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Read Political Suicide (1995)

Political Suicide (1995)

Online Book

Rating
3.47 of 5 Votes: 4
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ISBN
0881503266 (ISBN13: 9780881503265)
Language
English
Publisher
countryman press/foul play press

Political Suicide (1995) - Plot & Excerpts

Originally read in August, 2006. Re-read for a Robert Barnard-themed group blog effort. Excerpted from my post: I’ll confess that everything I know about British politics is cobbled together from Yes, Minister, The Thick of It, and some references on I’m Alan Partridge. (Someone from across the pond will have to tell me if my sources are reliable ones.) Barnard finds the same kind of humor in political monkey business, and the result is a book that’s considerably more satire than murder mystery. It moves breezily along, helped by the fact that most of the book is in the form of dialogue. We meet all the candidates from the major parties involved, and Barnard can’t help but poke fun at all of them.“And then,” Barnard writes, “there were the rest.” He goes on to name the other candidates on the ballot. “Taking them slowly, one by one, they were: the Home Rule for England candidate; the Women for the Bomb candidate; Yelping Lord Crotch, the Top of the Pops candidate; the Transcendental Meditation candidate; the Transvestite Meditation candidate (Ms Humphrey Ward); the John Lennon lives candidate; the Bring Back Hanging candidate; the Britain Out of the Common Market candidate;the Richard III Was Innocent Candidate; and Zachariah Zzugg, the I’m Coming Last candidate.”I tend to like my mysteries dark, and humor is something I generally like to keep separate. Political Suicide has just enough bite to keep me interested, though. It’s never too dark or too light, but something in between. I suspect it won’t be for everyone, and the ending even more so. Without spoiling the outcome of the murder investigation, I will say that Barnard makes it very clear that this is satire. As far as whether you will like it or not, I stand by my 2006 MySpace post: it may depend entirely on how you feel about Yes, Minister.

What do You think about Political Suicide (1995)?

I chose yet another book by British author Robert Barnard to serve as a diversion during my trolley commutes. The last one that I read by Mr. Barnard, The Bones in the Attic", was not particularly good, so I did not have high hopes for "Political Suicide". I was quite wrong! A Tory Member of Parliament for a Yorkshire district is found drowned in Thames, not that far from the Palace of Westminster. Suicide is suspected but murder cannot be ruled out. Chief Superintendent Sutcliffe investigates the case, the last case before his retirement. The criminal thread is moderately interesting, but it is by no means the best part of the book."Political Suicide" is primarily a hilarious satire on British politics. Written in 1986 (many of us remember who was the Prime Minister at that time), the novel lampoons politicians from all three major British political parties (the Tories, the Labour, and the SDP-Liberal Alliance). Let me quote one of innumerable funny passages: "Early on in his stint as a junior minister a newspaper had called him 'the thinking man's Tory', and the label had stuck, possibly because there was so little competition. The occasion for the label had been a thoughtful speech on the nature of conservatism which could, by a generous stretching of the term, have been called philosophical." Politicians from other parties are mercilessly ridiculed as well. I loved reading this book not only because of Mr. Barnard skillful pen. Like him, I believe that the majority of politicians are cheats, thieves, morons, and, generally, the worst scum of the earth.Three and three quarter stars.
—Lukasz Pruski

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