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Good Man In Africa, A [Paperback]

William Boyd
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
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Book Description

July 27 2010
"A Good Man in Africa" is William Boyd's classic, prize-winning debut novel. It is winner of the Whitbread Award and the Somerset Maugham Prize. Escapee from suburbia, overweight, oversexed...Morgan Leafy isn't overburdened with worldly success. Actually, he is refreshingly free from it. But then, as a representative of Her Britannic Majesty in tropical Kinjanja, it was not very constructive of him to get involved in wholesale bribery. Nor was it exactly oiling his way up the ladder to hunt down the improbably pointed breasts of his boss' daughter when officially banned from horizontal delights by a nasty dose...Falling back on his deep-laid reserves of misanthropy and guile, Morgan has to fight off the sea of humiliation, betrayal and ju-ju that threatens to wash over him. "A Good Man in Africa" is one of the greatest comic novels of recent times and will be loved by fans of Any Human Heart, as well as readers of Ben Macintyre, Sebastian Faulks, Nick Hornby and Hilary Mantel. "Wickedly funny". ("The Times"). "If a widening grim is the test of a novel's entertainment value in retospect, "A Good Man in Africa" romps home". ("Guardian"). William Boyd has received world-wide acclaim for his novels. They are: "A Good Man in Africa" (1981, winner of the Whitbread Award and the Somerset Maugham Prize), "An Ice Cream War" (1982, shortlisted for the 1982 Booker Prize and winner of the John Llewellyn Rhys Prize), "Stars and Bars" (1984), "The New Confessions" (1987), "Brazzaville Beach" (1990, winner of the McVitie Prize and the James Tait Black Memorial Prize), "The Blue Afternoon" (1993, winner of the 1993 Sunday Express Book of the Year Award and the Los Angeles Times Book Award for Fiction, 1995), "Armadillo" (1998) and "Any Human Heart" (2002, winner of the Prix Jean Monnet). He is also the author of a collection of screenplays and a memoir of his school days, "School Ties "(1985); and three collections of short stories: "On the Yankee Station" (1981), "The Destiny of Nathalie 'X'" (1995) and "Fascination" (2004). He also wrote the speculative memoir "Nat Tate: an American Artist" - the publication of which, in the spring of 1998, caused something of a stir on both sides of the Atlantic. A collection of his non-fiction writings, 1978-2004, entitled "Bamboo", was published in October 2005. His ninth novel, "Restless", was published in September 2006 (Costa Book Award, Novel of the Year 2006) and his tenth novel, "Ordinary Thunderstorms", published September 2009. His most recent novel is "Waiting For Sunrise" which published in February 2011.

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Morgan Leafy had high hopes when he first headed out to the small African nation of Kinjanja to serve as Her British Majesty's representative. But once there, Leafy's dreams of professional advancement and personal happiness soon fade: this son of an airport catering manager finds himself overtaken on the career ladder by other, newer recruits to the diplomatic corps who come from the right family and attended the right schools. What's worse, the girl of his dreams has just become engaged to someone younger, thinner, and better connected. And if all this weren't enough to make a career civil servant miserable, Leafy is also being blackmailed by a representative of one of Kinjanja's many political parties who has presented him with a puzzling task: get to know the Scottish medical doctor at a local university.

Author William Boyd has written about Africa before, most notably in his bestselling novel Brazzaville Beach. In A Good Man in Africa, Boyd spins a darkly comic tale of political corruption, revolution, sexual misadventure, blackmail, and death. By novel's end, Leafy may not have become a better man--or even a much wiser one--but he has acquired a kind of dignity and gritty courage for which he is well suited. --This text refers to an alternate Paperback edition.

Review

"This is a wildly funny novel, rich in witty prose and raucous incidents . . . without qualification, a delight." -The Washington Post

"Entertaining and successful . . . a champion storyteller. His prose style is intelligent, vigorous and pleasant." -The New York Times Book Review

"Comic realism echoing Evelyn Waugh . . . nimbly plotted, gracefully written . . . Boyd had endowed British fiction with a welcome depth and liveliness." -New York Newsday

"A gutsy writer . . . William Boyd is good company to keep." -Time

--This text refers to an alternate Paperback edition.

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Most helpful customer reviews
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Laugh Riot July 30 2002
By A Customer
Format:Paperback
I laughed so hard I cried. One of the funniest books written.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars A Good Man in Africa by William Boyd Feb 28 2011
Format:Paperback
Painfully funny and very true to life. I read this while I was living in Nigeria and it was like reading about my neighbours and colleagues. Boyd creates a protagonist that you love to hate.
There are scenes in which this poor wretch lies himself into hideous corners trying to get himself out of trouble. I have read it several times over the years and it never fails to entertain.
Lynn
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Amazon.com: 4.2 out of 5 stars  32 reviews
35 of 36 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars a well-written, funny/satiric blast on the colonial British July 20 2003
By lazza - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
William Boyd, a terrific writer who knows Africa quite well (..he was brought up there), really cuts loose with 'A Good Man in Africa'. He completely deconstructs the psyche of the pompous, self-righteous and arrogant British colonial rulers (diplomats) of Africa during the 1960s. However I think even the most right wing British will not be offended with this book since his leading characters are so over-the-top buffoons and prigs it is obvious the author is writing a purely fictious comic novel, in the Tom Sharpe-esque tradition (but better written), rather than intentionally being cruel.

The story is about the travails of a junior British diplomat who is stuck in a nowhere African country and, despite wanting to succeed in his job/life, completely makes an ass out of himself. This is made easier by having a nitwit boss, a local mistress with a social disease, and the knack of always putting his foot in his mouth. The book is often laugh-out-loud funny. And the author has done a marvellous job in structuring the book; it is well-paced and literate.

Bottom line: surely among William Boyd's best works.

21 of 21 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Brit High Brow Laid Low Sep 11 2001
By A Customer - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
There are few enjoyments in life better than a direct, unfettered comedic form told in literary style - here is an example. No pretense, no glossing over the low points of life - however base - but never yieldng in style. It is possible to be really funny and intelligent at the same time. A great run-through of the British pretense for class and superiority - there is absolutely nothing superior in the end that has anything to do with these British Foreign Service types pretending to be somebody in third world Africa. Morgan Leafy's pretensions and attempts to satisfy his inner cravings - inevitably ending in disaster and ever plunging disgrace - often foiled by the good Dr. Murrary (who is everything Leafy should be but is not) are hilarious. Boyd's descriptions of Leafy's drunken bumblings and the horrible hangovers that ensue are just plain funny. The social commentary on British attempts at understanding - much less improving - the "colonial" cultures they presume to lead is priceless. Sad that this great and funny read is out of print - but well worth tracking down a copy in the "used" section.
15 of 16 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Morgan on the slippery path. Aug 2 1999
By A Customer - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
One of the great comic set pieces of contemporary fiction, A Good Man in Africa tells the story of Morgan Leafy, a minor English diplomat whose posting to a small African country rapidly accelerates into disaster. Leafy, an overweight Londoner in his thirties is quite unsuited to life in the tropics, dividing his time between heavy drinking and romantic dalliances, unwisely including his bosses' daughter, the wife of a prominent local politician and a prostitute called Hazel, with results that not even Morgan, in his worst nightmares, could ever have predicted. Blackmailed and desperate, he is forced by circumstances to try to bribe one Doctor Alex Murray, an upstanding Scottish physician, the novel's unyielding face of moral probity and Morgan's hated nemesis. The slide has begun, and it does not end until events take an unexpected twist in the closing pages. A Good Man In Africa is a marvellous, rare kind of book. Hilarious, with fine characterization and a well paced plot, it combines the intelligence of classic fiction with ground-level punch. Due in part to a weak screenplay and some of the worst miscasting in the history of cinema it did not work well as a film, but the novel remains a classic of twentieth century modern fiction.
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