![]() |
| Fiction/Literature | Home | Contact | |||
In this contemporary Greek tragedy, Hero, a tiny nation with an identity crisis, struggles to shelter its proud epic past from some peculiarly modern indignities. Among these is the rule imposed by the latest foreign invaders. In a classic clash between state and citizen, both vie for the corpse of an assassinated rebel commander. With wry, existential humor, war-weary reporter James Teheda chronicles his journey through the secret world of Hero's neighborhoods, political prisons, and defunct historical factories. From the labyrinth emerges a surprising picture of the doomed commander remembered less for his devotion to war than to soap—Hero's most revered, and vanishing, industry. |
Made In Hero: The War for Soap A
novel
by Betty
Hugh Kirkus Discoveries calls this book "An extraordinary find." ...Managing to be both archetypal and contemporary, this fierce, sour tale, written with an echo of the gorgeous austerity of the ancient Greeks, ranks with the finest of war-writing. “Hero is as much an idea as a location,” its moon-surface deserts relieved by pungent olive trees, from which come the region’s fabled soap, its acrid air spiced with the smell of strong coffee. Hero is Hugh’s imagined battlefield (Middle Eastern? North African? Mediterranean?) but, more importantly, the very soul of war. Seven years long, epic contest “The Great Uprising” has overspilled three nations, its instigators (“the New Barbarians”) hoping to “destabilize The Empire to the point of collapse.” Peopled by warriors boasting tragic, legendary names—Hektor, Antigone, Sophi, Hollow Bones—the land is in a constant conflict whose causes and outlines are insidiously unclear. Drawn back to this savage, exotic outpost from the boredom of reporting celebrity gossip, Teheda, a wizened war correspondent straight out of Joseph Conrad, hunts a mystery/scoop—the assassination of the sad-eyed rebel martyr known simply as “The Commander” and the fight, between foreign invaders and insurgents, over his hallowed or hated corpse. Groaning under allusions to the Intifada and the IRA, to Anbar Province and shell-shocked Saigon, to Algeria’s freedom struggle and all colonial revolutions, Hero is the metaphorical home of every bollixed, Byzantine struggle over land or blood or, in this case, ridiculously, soap. Faceless repression—in the form of “The Authority” or “Central Information Division”—attacks eternally the human, the young, the vulnerable: “…I discovered that the face of war is a child,” writes Hugh. “Innocence is first lost among the young.” Poetic. Unforgettable. And in the company of Hemingway, Wilfred Owen, Ernst Junger, Curzio Malaparte and T.E. Lawrence. This review is reproduced with the permission of Kirkus Discoveries. It has been reformatted for easy viewing. —Clay Dog Books More Reviews of MADE IN HERO: THE WAR FOR SOAP "a deftly written satire, highly recommended..." "a fine effort at creating modern day everyday martyrs for the literary world." —Boston Area Small Press and Poetry Scene "evocative of Gabriel Garcia Marquez" |
||||
| Home | More Reviews | Publications | Contact |