From the author of the existential thriller 'The Execution' comes
'Colony', a novel set in French Guiana as the age of Empire draws
to a close and anarchy beckons. The year is 1928. Sabir - petty
criminal, drifter, war veteran - is on a prison ship bound for a
notorious penal colony in the French tropics. Soon after his
arrival in the bagne, as it's known, Sabir is shipped out to a work
camp deep in the South American jungle but quickly comes to the
realisation that his old life is dead, and return to France an
impossibility. Yet, if he's to survive at all, he must escape the
brutality of the bagne. Posing as a professional gardener, Sabir
wins the confidence and protection of the camp's naive, idealistic
Commandant. With a group of like-minded convicts - including the
secretive, enigmatic Edouard, a comrade from the trenches of WW1 -
he soon launches his escape bid, across the seas in a stolen boat.
Bad weather forces the men ashore, condemning them to a dismal,
hallucinatory tramp through the jungle. As hunger and rivalry tear
the group apart, Sabir understands he has scant chance of escaping
into another life. In Part Two, Manne - deserter, itinerant exile -
comes to the Colony in search of his deported friend, the same
Edouard from Part One. With a false identity and cover story, Manne
installs himself as a guest at the Commandant's house. There, he
falls into an affair with his host's wife. Meanwhile, the
Commandant is slowly unravelling, growing ever more suspicious of
who Manne is and what he's doing in the Colony. Manne ends up
trapped like everyone else in the bagne, and realises that he too
must escape. The novel's two plot threads begin to merge -
boundaries between dream and reality blur, bringing a surreal tinge
to the dramatic climax. Both a page-turning adventure story, and a
bold novel of ideas, Colony takes an historical background familiar
to readers of Henri Charriere's 'Papillon', and twists it into a
metaphysical journey. Brilliantly evoking an atmosphere of colonial
decline in the tropics, the novel explores the shifting natures of
identity, memory and reality.
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