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Mandoa, Mandoa! (1933)

door Winifred Holtby

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Mandoa is a small African state. At its head a virgin princess conceives (immaculately) further princesses. The old traditions are undisturbed until the Lord High Chamberlain visits Addis and discovers baths and cocktail shakers, motor cars and telephones. This is 1931.
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1-5 van 7 worden getoond (volgende | toon alle)
Winifred Holtby wrote a number of superb novels set in early 20th-century England. And then, for some reason, she decided to write a satirical work about imperialism set in a fictional African country. I was encouraged at first by Holtby’s satirization of British politics and society, and her development of a strong independent female character central to the plot. The premise -- a travel agency trying to establish a foothold for tourism in Mandoa -- was also sound. But as the novel progressed the story became increasingly convoluted. I began to lose interest and found myself skimming through the last few chapters.

Well, at least I can say I’ve now read all of Winifred Holtby’s novels. I highly recommend her work, especially her masterpiece South Riding, but there’s no need to rush out and read this one. ( )
  lauralkeet | Jun 26, 2018 |
A very well-crafted satire set in a fictional African country. Given the subject, I expected an Evelyn Waugh-type novel, all caustic wit and razor-sharp edges; instead I was treated to a thoughtful look at the clash of two cultures engaged in a game of mutual exploitation. Holtby's characters are exaggerated for comic effect, but they are also complex people who are never wholly devoid of humanity.

The copy I checked out from the library was published in 1933 and there were several pages in the last section which were still uncut. Sad to think this wonderful book sat on a shelf for eighty-four years without being read! ( )
1 stem amanda4242 | Sep 11, 2017 |
Very readable. Dreamt-up African state which embraces European values but with disappointing and unfulfilled results.
Favourite line: "Golf? One of the most distressing defects of civilization. Never mind."
  ivanfranko | Aug 6, 2016 |
This book didn't really work for me: it seemed a bit rambly and unfocussed and way too laboured. ( )
  mari_reads | Feb 9, 2014 |
When Maurice Durrant, the youngest member of Prince’s Tours, wins his seat, he sends his profligate brother Bill to Mandoa, a small African state, to attend the wedding of a princess. With him is his old friend Jean Stanbury, who has recently lost her newspaper job. The arrive to a Mandoa where the Lord High Chamberlain, Safi Talal, is a Westernophile who watches American films over and over; believes that the typewriter, rubber bath, and fountain pen are the hallmarks of civilized society; and uses phrases such as “OK, baby.”

I’m usually a huge Winifred Holtby fan, but I really couldn’t get into this book as much as I thought I would. Holtby seemed as though she was out of her element with this book; it’s the only one not set in Yorkshire, and she wasn’t much of a humorist (as much as Evelyn Waugh, to whose book Black Mischief this novel is compared).

Sometimes Mandoa, Mandoa! is funny, but it’s hidden in such a way that you have to read sentences again in order to really get it. Safi Talal, with his obsession with American culture (there’s even a Lord High Culture Promoter in Lolagoba) is probably one of the more interesting characters in the book, because he serves as a link between the natives and Europeans who try to “civilize” them. I enjoyed watching the interplay between the Mandoans and the Europeans, especially reading the list of rules for Mandoans (on pages 216-18). But I felt that a lot of the time the plot of the novel dragged and I couldn’t really get into it. It’s a shame considering that Winifred Holtby truly is one of my favorite authors. ( )
  Kasthu | Mar 17, 2012 |
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» Andere auteurs toevoegen

AuteursnaamRolType auteurWerk?Status
Holtby, Winifredprimaire auteuralle editiesbevestigd
Shaw, MarionIntroductieSecundaire auteursommige editiesbevestigd

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Mandoa is a small African state. At its head a virgin princess conceives (immaculately) further princesses. The old traditions are undisturbed until the Lord High Chamberlain visits Addis and discovers baths and cocktail shakers, motor cars and telephones. This is 1931.

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