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Right Of Thirst: A Novel
 
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Right Of Thirst: A Novel (Paperback)

by Frank Huyler (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
List Price: CDN$ 18.99
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Review

"Brilliant, start to finish. . . . It's clear and deep and wise, and very few contemporary novels can make that claim." (Stewart O'Nan, author of Songs for the Missing )

"Lyrical, moving, gripping. . . . A dark, compelling story about moral ambition and its pitfalls-a necessary book for this moment in America's imperial history." (Andrew Solomon, author of the National Book Award-winning The Noonday Demon )

"A book to treasure. It is a riveting tale of our time, at once haunting and inspiring, provocative and insightful. It will stay with me for a long time." (Tom Brokaw )

"Resonant. . . . vivid and compassionate. . . . A timely, disquieting reflection on mortality, war and the startling dichotomy between the affluent West and the impoverished Third World." (Kirkus Reviews )

"One of the finest novels I've read in years. . . . Ultimately, this book is a timely, powerful exploration into the uses and limits of benevolence . . . an exploration into the limits of what'sgood and decent in the American character." (Ben Fountain, author of Brief Encounters with Che Guevara )

"Dr. Huyler's writing is quiet, precise, spellbinding from beginning to end. . . . Easily holds with the best contemporary fiction." (Abigail Zuger, New York Times )

"He writes in a surgical fashion-with precision and care, making no sudden metaphorical movements. Huyler's protagonist resists easy answers or self-congratulatory axioms in examining the ethics of humanitarian intervention (The New Yorker )

"One of the finest novels I've read in years. . . . A timely, powerful exploration into the uses and limits of benevolence . . . the limits of what's good and decent in the American character." (Ben Fountain, author of Brief Encounters with Che Guevara )

"Right of Thirst is a book to treasure. It is a riveting tale of our time, at once haunting and inspiring, provocative and insightful. It will stay with me for a long time." (Tom Brokaw )

"It's brilliant, start to finish. The voice is an achievement, and the world of emotion he delivers. It's solid-so solid it reminds me of a mature Hemingway. . . . It's clear and deep and wise." (Stewart O'Nan, author of Songs for the Missing, on RIGHT OF THIRST )


Product Description

Shattered by his wife's death, and by his own role in it, successful cardiologist Charles Anderson volunteers to assist with earthquake relief in an impoverished Islamic country in a constant state of conflict with its neighbor. But when the refugees he's come to help do not appear and artillery begins to fall in the distance along the border, the story takes an unexpected turn.

This haunting, resonant tour de force about one man's desire to live a moral life offers a moving exploration of the tensions between poverty and wealth, the ethics of intervention, the deep cultural differences that divide the world, and the essential human similarities that unite it.


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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A fascinating fictionalized discussion of Western aid, Jun 1 2009
By Luanne Ollivier - See all my reviews
(TOP 50 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
Right of Thirst opens with cardiologist Dr. Charles Anderson saying good bye to his wife - as he assists with ending her life.

With her passing, Charles is lost, functioning but not really living. He attends a lecture by Scott Coles, who has started a relief organization to help earthquake victims in a third world country. On a whim, Charles offers to be the doctor of the refugee camp Coles is setting up.

"I suppose another world was what I wanted most."

Charles ends up in an unnamed third world country, high in the mountains, with Scott Cole's girlfriend as the other staff member as well as a resident cook and his nephew. In charge of the camp is military officer Captain Sanjit Rai.

But the refugees don't come. When they attempt to make contact with the local village, Rai discourages them. Anderson's skills are needed to help with a local child, but that is the extent of the use of his medical skills. They are visited by further military personnel, as there may be enemy action in the area, but still the camp remains empty of refugees.

Frank Huyler has created a powerful character driven novel. The interplay between the three main characters, each from a different world and their views on class, aid and life are compelling.

The title 'Right of Thirst' had me mystified in the beginning. It is explained part way through the novel and I think it is the catalyst for the entire plot.

"Our religion came from the desert. From Arabia. Water was very precious to them. And so one of our oldest laws is that we must give water to travelers. that is why we always give tea to our guests."

"Offering tea is an obligation?"

"Yes. In our scripture this is called the right of thirst."

Right of Thirst explores the obligation that Western countries and populace feel to provide aid to countries that they have deemed in need. What happens when that offering is not embraced? Charles has mixed feelings when he is at the camp. He is angry and annoyed at the local population for not being suitably impressed and thankful for what is being done for them.

"What is wrong with you people? Why do you do this? I'd like to know why I came all this way for nothing."

The reply make him even more unhappy.

"We did not ask you to come here. And now that you cannot be a hero, you are angry. You are trying to help yourself, not us."

Huyler's writing is beautiful. The detail and thought in every exchange and description is worth stopping, rereading and savouring. The juxtaposition between Western idealism and Third World reality is explored in this thought provoking and timely novel. Huyler himself is a physician and has lived in various countries. His work has a ring of authenticity. I found it especially interesting as I had just read and reviewed a memoir of a young doctor in a refugee camp.

Highly recommended. A portion of sales from this book are being donated to ProSorata by the author.
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4.0 out of 5 stars powerful and moving, Nov 1 2009
By Andrea (Ontario, Canada) - See all my reviews
[Cross-posted to LibraryThing and LivingSocial]

Where would you be willing to go to find meaning and redemption in your life? What would you be willing to do? Would it be worth it, in the end? These are the questions that Charles Anderson, 58 year-old cardiologist, faces as he struggles with the death of his wife (and his hand in it). His search for something more, something decent, leads him to the mountains of a country very similar to Pakistan, where he helps set up a refugee camp to provide relief for earthquake victims. But as the months pass, the refugees are nowhere in sight, and fighting along the nearby border escalates, Charles has to figure out what hes really there for.

This story was a slow build, it wasnt until about halfway in that the pace picked up and I couldnt put it down. It was one of the few books that I could start over again right after finishing it. Huylers writing style is somewhat similar to Ernest Hemingway  sparse but beautiful and vivid, occasionally hard and blunt. There are two chapters in particular that I felt like I lived those moments with Charles, they were so well written. One is where he performs an amputation on a teenage girl at the refugee camp and the other is his flight home. The passage where Charles confronts his own motivations and what he really went to the camp for is also very powerful and moving.

Along the way, Huyler also raises questions about our own values as a culture, how those values conflict with others and play a role in foreign aid, war, and so on. The novels feels bleak at times and it can be unsettling, I think because it makes you question your own feelings about these issues as you read. There is also a haunting quality to it and I suspect that it will linger in my memory for a long time to come.
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