We are
looking to promote the work of an up and coming new author, William
MacDonald. William has written a novel set in Cambodia, a country he
knows well. The book is an intelligent
political thriller, which draws on the horrors and complexity of
Cambodia’s recent past and the troubles that afflict its present. We
thought it possible that your readers would be interested in this work.
A brief synopsis of the book is set out below. The book is available direct on Amazon
Kindle, at a nominal initial price. For Amazon.com the link is amazon.com/app for Amazon.co.uk the link is
amazon.co.uk/app.
Yours Sincerely
Ray Niccols
MAL Publishing
10 Red Lion Square
London, WC1R 4QG
AFTER POL POT: A MODERN HISTORICAL NOVEL
Cambodia was
broken open by the Cold War, a passive victim of domino theories, the
Vietnam conflict and the casual brutality of global strategies. In the
wake of the devastation had moved
Pol Pot. Calling his work genocide missed the point, it was suicide,
the Khmer Rouge had killed their own. Nearly two million dead, a fifth
of the population in less than four years, amidst a senseless spiral of
utopian ideology, peasant savagery and mind-numbing
incompetence. After Pol Pot had been driven away, Cambodia was
consumed by a fifteen year civil war funded by American and Russian
rivalry. The ending of the Cold War had found Cambodia a shattered
brutalised victim of a country, awash with murderers, survivors
and refugees; a victim surrounded by a guilt-ridden guilty world.
Emily is a shy,
socially clumsy English lawyer with a resentful streak, a taste for
alcohol and a driving need to find some kind of direction in her life.
In Cambodia where an autocratic
and brutal government creates a need for human rights lawyers, she
hopes to find that direction. She sees a poisoned society awash with
corruption, violence and development aid. Corrupt bureaucrats,
ex-murderers, traumatised genocide survivors and westernised
idealists mix with a stratified western community of aid workers,
missionaries and sex-tourists.
An observer to
the brutal suppression of a political protest, Emily becomes caught up
in its aftermath as western governments combine in an effort to force
democracy and a respect for human
rights on to a reluctant weakening government. As someone she meets is
promptly killed, and people she trusts start lying, Emily finds herself
trapped. Part observer, part pawn, part angry instigator in the chain
of events that follows, Emily struggles to
understand what is actually going on.
The political
protest was organised by Vanta, a journalist from a wealthy, corrupt
Cambodian family. With his western education and bruised patriotism,
his fury at the diseased state of
Cambodian society had finally boiled over. Surviving the massacre he
becomes part of the campaign for democracy, intent on using the west to
cure his country.
In Pol Pot’s
killing fields Vanta’s father, Tan, survived by learning to coldly
understand the world around him without anger and to brutally follow its
rules. Thirty years later, devoid
of morality, idealism and belief in people, caring only for his family
and stability, he stares in panic at the western-driven democratic
campaign.
Rolf is a Cold
War veteran and victim. He is an ambitious, charismatic man, with a
wife to match and magnify his aspirations. He had first come to
Cambodia in the eighties as a CIA agent
funnelling support to the Khmer Rouge in their struggle with the
Russian-backed Vietnamese communists. Returning to Cambodia with the
CIA in the post-Cold War world, he struggles desperately to adapt to the
new international priorities while nursing a bitterness
for the way that his previous work has stained his struggling career.
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