Zimbabwe
(2013)

Nonfiction

eBook

Provider: hoopla

Details

PUBLISHED
[United States] : AuthorHouse UK, 2013
Made available through hoopla
DESCRIPTION

1 online resource

ISBN/ISSN
9781481796101 (electronic bk.) MWT12092481, 1481796100 (electronic bk.) 12092481
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

John Parker was born an Ayrshire farmers boy on the 1st of January 1964 in the West of Scotland. After travelling the world, mainly by himself, he now prefers to divide his time between his home in Scotland and his house on La Isla de la Juventud, Cuba. Parker's interests are writing comedy, travelling and photography. While preferring to tutor himself in his writing dexterity or any other intellectual allegiance, he acquired a handy knowledge of various languages to assist him on foreign shores. As he backpacked all over the world, this bilingual adroitness gave Parker a different perspective and outlook on the many places he saw and the people he met along the way. Zimbabwe is the second of Parkers books after writing Escape Route, which is about the many ridiculously comical tight spots he experienced during his backpacking journeys. On one of Parkers many digressions he sojourned all over Africa, and his observations there, along with his farming background, inspired him to write this book. Zimbabwe is a fictional book of satirical humor about a country ruled by a dictator. The story denotes a wry and often cruel denouement regarding the consequences of dictatorships, and also presents a supposition on how the lives of the citizens within them are affected. The humorous characters within the literary composition will tend to veer the reader towards the hypothesis that both black and white people are guilty of a slightly tribal built-in prejudicial disposition, and it also reveals how fickle the human race can be. However, it's all written in the name of comedy, and the moral of the book is to demonstrate the instability in character that makes up the human psyche and to find the humor that lies beneath. Many literary critics are now commenting that there isn't enough humor being written nowadays. Zimbabwe is unique and others who have read it thought it was hilarious, written by an author with a sharp sense of humor, you will have a laugh or two if you read on

Mode of access: World Wide Web

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