Scoop, Evelyn Waugh's bestselling comedy of England's newspaper
business of the 1930s is the closest thing foreign correspondents
have to a bible -- they swear by it. But few readers are acquainted
with Waugh's memoir of his stint as a London Daily Mail
correspondent in Abyssinia (now Ethiopia) during the Italian
invasion in the 1930s. Waugh in Abyssinia is an entertaining
account by a cantankerous and unenthusiastic war reporter that
"provides a fascinating short history of Mussolini's imperial
adventure as well as a wickedly witty preview of the characters and
follies that figure into Waugh's famous satire." In the forward,
veteran foreign correspondent John Maxwell Hamilton explores in how
Waugh ended up in Abyssinia, which real-life events were
fictionalized in Scoop, and how this memoir fits into Waugh's
overall literary career, which includes the classic Brideshead
Revisited. As Hamilton explains, Waugh was the right man (a
misfit), in the right place (a largely unknown country that lent
itself to farcical imagination), at the right time (when the
correspondents themselves were more interesting than the scraps of
news they could get.) The result, Waugh in Abyssinia, is a memoir
like no other.
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