When international correspondent Tom Craig travels to Malawi to report on a mysterious string of murders terrorizing the tiny country, he discovers another mystery that must be solved, this one very close to his heart. He decides to revisit Joss, a woman with whom he had a passionate affair some years back and who is married to the newly arrived American ambassador to Malawi. Although they last parted vowing never to meet again, he is secretly hoping to see her. But he discovers that the woman at the ambassador's side is an imposter. He also learns he's had a daughter by Joss who is in mortal danger. As he struggles to find out what happened to Joss and save his daughter, Tom is also solving the mystery of the string of murders with possible political links, reportedly being committed by a leopard-man. His view of life evolves as he confronts African myth very much alive in Malawi, threats to his own life, and deep desire for justice and family.
Rezensionen / Stimmen
I love novels like this, fictional narratives, set-in real-world circumstances. Hunter has many years of intimate experience in Africa, and I was able to get a good sense of his in Malawi. He brings the settings of his story alive with explicitly descriptive detail. His complex, yet easily related to the narrator is authentic, knowledgeable, and believable. The plot is whimsical. As a devotee of books like this, I highly recommend this one. Thumbs up, Hunter.
-Amal Sedky Winter, Escape to Aswan When Tom Craig, a hard-boiled reporter arrives in Malawi to investigate a series of bizarre murders, he looks up his old flame, Joss. But when he meets the once breezy, sensual Joss, he smells a rat. The novel, "Joss" is a page-turner, set in an African country, off-the-beaten-track. Hunter's novel has an authentic feel--of a writer who knows the continent very well.
-Gretchen McCullough, Confessions of a Knight Errant and Shahrazade's Gift
Sprache
Verlagsort
Produkt-Hinweis
Illustrationen
Maße
Höhe: 229 mm
Breite: 152 mm
Dicke: 11 mm
Gewicht
ISBN-13
978-1-951082-52-9 (9781951082529)
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Schweitzer Klassifikation
Frederic Hunter served as a Foreign Service Officer in the United States Information Service in Brussels, Belgium, and, shortly after its independence, at three posts in the Republic of the Congo: Bukavu, Coquilhatville, and Leopoldville. He later became the Africa Correspondent of the Christian Science Monitor, based in Nairobi.
A playwright / screenwriter, Hunter's award-winning stage work, The Hemingway Play, was given a reading at the Eugene O'Neill Playwrights Conference, presented at Harvard University's Loeb Drama Center and produced by PBS's Hollywood Television Theater series. Other plays have been performed at the Dallas Theatre Center, ACT in San Francisco, and the Ensemble Theater in Santa Barbara.
Movies Hunter has written have been produced by PBS, ABC, and CBS. Research for his PBS drama Lincoln and the War Within led him to write the historical novel Abe and Molly: The Lincoln Courtship. He's taught screenwriting at the Santa Barbara Writers Conference, at UCSB, and at Principia College where he also taught Modern African Literature. Hunter's Africa experience is the basis for several of his novels.