From the Nobel Prize-winning author comes a riveting tour de force
that examines emigration, dislocation, and dread.
"The coolest literary eye and the most lucid prose we have." --*The New
York Times Book Review
*
No writer has rendered our boundariless, post-colonial world more
acutely or prophetically than V. S. Naipaul, or given its upheavals such
a hauntingly human face.
In the beginning it is just a car trip through Africa. Two English
people--Bobby, a civil servant with a guilty appetite for African boys,
and Linda, a supercilious "compound wife"--are driving back to their
enclave after a stay in the capital. But in between lies the landscape
of an unnamed country whose squalor and ethnic bloodletting suggest Idi
Amin's Uganda. And the farther Naipaul's protagonists travel into it,
the more they find themselves crossing the line that separates
privileged outsiders from horrified victims. Alongside this Conradian
tour de force are four incisive portraits of men seeking liberation far
from home. By turns funny and terrifying, sorrowful and unsparing, In A
Free State is Naipaul at his best.