Monday, March 5, 2012

THE CATASTROPHE by Ian Wedde

Could a novel mixing food, politics and kidnapping, by New Zealand's newest Poet Laureate, be a left-field contender for the 2012 Ngaio Marsh Award for Best Crime Novel?

THE CATASTROPHE has been called Ian Wedde’s "most gripping and accessible novel to date", and "a sharp contemporary thriller" that "combines a sensual appreciation of fine cuisine with a subtle understanding of the Palestinian political situation".

Publisher's blurb:
The Age of Excess has been good to Christopher Hare. One of the world’s top food writers, he has travelled to the best restaurants in the most exotic locations, with the chic dining companion known to readers of his lavish books as Thé Glacé. But, in the new mood of austerity ushered in by the credit crunch, will the world still be interested in what he thinks of Robuchon’s caramelised quail? Certainly Christopher’s editor isn’t.

Christopher’s moment of truth catches up with him in the corrupt space between the violent Lebanese civil war of 1975-90 and the luxurious bolt-holes of the Riviera.

One evening, almost at the bottom of his over-the-hill slope, he is investigating the budget options in a mediocre restaurant in off-season Nice. These days he is no longer accompanied by Thé Glacé, aka Mary Pepper, who has found international fame and fortune as an art photographer of pornographically eroticised foodstuffs. In the restaurant, Christopher witnesses an assassination. Impulsively, he throws himself into the action, and becomes the almost-willing victim of a political kidnapping.

What will be Christopher’s fate? Will his ex-wife ‘Thé Glacé’ come to his rescue? Will the harshly beautiful Palestinian paediatrician Hawwa Habash soften towards her accidental prisoner? Suffused with culinary delights and political menace, The Catastrophe is a novel which speaks urgently to our rapidly changing times.

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