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Sunday Independent praises House of War |
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Wednesday, 03 March 2010 13:07 |
  Edition 2, Sunday 28th February EntertainmentTheatre of war setting makes for riveting readEntertaining and informative, classic quest narrative is a great adjunct to Afghan history February 07, 2010 Edition 1 Michiel Heyns House of War by: Hamilton Wende (Penguin) R190 review: Michiel Heyns House of War is a compelling blend of historical material and topical reference. Set in present-day Afghanistan, it features one Sebastian Burke, an ex-Rhodesian, now British, academic who is searching for the lost city of Ay Khanoum in Northern Afghanistan where, he believes, Alexander the Great's Royal Diaries may have been kept in the temple of Ares, the god of war. With him on the quest is Claire Finch, an American documentary film-maker, two photographers, and one Professor Abdulov, an Uzbek academic. The story, then, is a classic quest narrative, complete with a fabulous, near-mythical prize. Afghanistan being al-Qaeda territory, there is also no lack of adversaries - in this instance apparently intent upon preventing Sebastian from perpetuating the non-Islamic aspects of Afghan history. For the rest, there is a lively cast of goodies and baddies, and bad-goodies and good-baddies, keeping the action revved up and reader hooked. The novel starts with the murder of two American servicemen in a hotel in Tashkent, and ends with a shootout in Afghanistan, with plenty of scares and spills in-between. Wende twists three separate skeins into a single yarn: there is Sebastian and his quest, consistently set against his past history in the Rhodesian war; then there is Claire, also burdened with memories of her past life, of atrocities in the Congo; these two narratives are in turn intertwined with extracts from the life of Alexander, his many victories and his polymorphously perverse love life. It's an ambitious blend, involving quite a bit of backtracking at times impeded by an awkward plethora of pluperfects ("The girl had stared down at her. 'Ma'am,' she had said. 'I am requesting you to move along.' In the end they had been forced to give up and drive back..."). Also, the extracts, from Alexander's life, though fascinating in themselves, are really too extreme in their excesses of sex and violence to be as relevant to the modern narrative as the author seems to want them to be. We are told that Sebastian wanted "to uncover the pain in Alexander's life as a way, perhaps, of understanding his own", but really, the pain in Alexander's life, if there was any, was caused by his massacre of thousands upon thousands of people and by his simultaneous involvement with a male lover, a wife, a mistress and a eunuch, not to mention his love for his horse: there is surely no key here to Sebastian's own rather more conventional tragedy, poignant as that is. But, technical quibbles aside, House of War is a riveting read, fast-paced and hard-hitting. It also seems thoroughly at home in its many locations: Wende, as a freelance journalist and television producer, has clearly done the extensive footwork required to write a novel as wide-ranging as this one. The various locations, from Tashkent to Ay Khanoum, are vividly described, and the politics of American involvement in Afghanistan and Iraq, and of the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan, are sketched in with the light touch of somebody who knows his stuff. Without haranguing us, the writer makes quite clear how spurious the grounds were for the invasion of Iraq, how deliberately blind the White House and its neocons were to the realities of the situation. Of course, this is not a new insight, but it is here conveyed with sober conviction. But the novel also reminds us that Ares, the god of war, and Aphrodite, the goddess of love, were lovers, and the quest for Alexander's diaries is pleasantly paralleled by the developing romance between the independent-minded Claire and the emotionally damaged Sebastian, who offer just enough resistance to each other's charms to make their eventual union as satisfying as it is predictable. By Alexander's standards, it's a very tame romance, but by the less extreme measure of modern fiction, it is all it should be. With Afghanistan once again chronically in the news, House of War is a fascinating reminder that it has always been the site of conflict, and that the present wrangle is just the latest chapter in an age-old and bloody history. Entertaining and informative, it makes a very readable adjunct to that history. |
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'Fair Lady' likes House of War |
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Tuesday, 19 January 2010 17:30 |
House of war By Hamilton Wende (Penguin Books)
Sebastian Burke, an acclaimed historian, and Claire Finch, a documentary producer, travel to the lost city of Ay Khanoum in Afghanistan, hoping to find the Royal Diaries of Alexander the Great. Their aim is to make a documentary about the journey and the contents of the diaries. However, their adventure becomes unexpectedly dangerous when two Americans are killed by Al Qaeda terrorists in the bar of their hotel. Soon they discover that they are being followed and that their own lives are under threat. Together they have to face not only the danger they are in, they also have to come to terms with their respective pasts. Hamilton Wende’s novel is a fast-paced story about love, adventure and war. Fascinating snippets of information about Alexander the Great and his various lovers/conquests are woven into the narrative and contribute to making it a satisfying read. |
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Cape Argus declares House of War 'A love story for all ages' |
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Tuesday, 19 January 2010 16:58 |
| | | |  Your entertainment guide from Independent News and Media | |
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| | | A love story for all ages | January 11, 2010
By Beryl Eichenberger
With a foreign correspondent's eye and a storyteller's pen, Hamilton Wende has created a novel that juxtaposes the fierce passions that drive men to war against those that cause us to love.
It is a beautifully structured novel that is not afraid to show the harsh realities of war. Throw in a clever blend of intrigue and love, and you have an absorbing and sometimes shocking read.
Wende's skill is in showing us love can still be the most transcending and enduring passion of all.
Weaving together an intricate story that embraces historical fact with fiction, Wende takes us on a journey of ancient discovery paralleled by the intimate personal journeys of main protagonists Sebastian Burke and Claire Finch.
Sebastian Burke, former Rhodesian and esteemed academic, has spent his life trying to understand the secret life of Alexander the Great and his slave bride, Roxane.
At the heart of his research are the Royal Diaries, lost to the world after barbarians invaded Ay Khanoum thousands of years ago.
The city's ancient site is in the heart of Northern Afghanistan and, with the Taliban now forced underground, the opportunity to find the diaries of Alexander becomes a reality.
With the help of fiery and fiercely independent American documentary producer Claire Finch, the journey can now be undertaken.
Intrigued by the quest, she sets up her team of filmmakers and high-profile contacts, that will allow them to move through the devastated country with relative ease.
However, nothing is as it seems. From the outset, with a murderous attack by al-Qaeda terrorists on American servicemen at their hotel in Tashkent, comes the growing realisation far more is at stake.
Wende pulls no punches. He draws heavily on his experience and brings the reader right into the middle of the distressing situations that so often dominate our daily headlines.
But there is a softer side to the novel as well, and that is what, for me, made it such a compelling read.
At the heart of the story are two people who have spent their lives focusing on projects to the exclusion of committed relationships.
We feel sympathy for the angst Burke carries, the flashbacks to his childhood in Rhodesia and a beloved brother.
We relate to the life Finch has chosen as a television journalist covering war zones, her need to show what she sees through her lens to the world.
Their journey is one of personal and historical discovery. While the outcome is fairly predictable, the landscape Wende paints is at once heartbreaking, terrifying and fascinating.
With lively and well-drawn characters, the stage is set for a meeting and clash of cultures, but also for the uncovering of buried secrets.
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House of War voted one of the best reads of 2009 by the Natal Witness |
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Tuesday, 01 December 2009 14:01 |
Search BOOK SA - News @ BOOK SA November 30th, 2009 by Ben - Editor          BOOK SA members Lisa Lazarus,Gregory Fried, Hamilton Wende and André Brink caught the attention of the Witness’ book reviewers this year - along with a healthy number of other SA authors. Here are the reads of the year from Julia Denny-Dimitriou, Christopher Merrett, Janet van Eeden, Moira Lovell, Stephen Coan, Stephanie Alexander and Yves Vanderhaeghen. One question: where are Margaret von Klemperer’s picks? The book that affected me most has to be The Book of Jacob — a journey into parenthood by Lisa Lazarus and Greg Fried. It was painful but cathartic to read about this couple’s struggles as they navigated the treacherous waters of new parenthood. Like many, they were completely unprepared for the storm they sailed into when they had their son, Jacob. A courageous and beautifully written book. I do sometimes get a chance to read works I want to read, as opposed to those I have to read. One is A Short History of Tractors in Ukrainian by Marina Lewycka. I laughed so hard in places that my husband came to find out if I’d finally gone completely loony. I wasn’t brave enough to tell him that the eccentric main character reminded me a lot of my father-in- law.
Book details Scribd.com book preview: The Double Crown: Secret Writings of the Female Pharaoh Cats: Biography, Crime, Fiction, Health, International, Non-fiction, Parenting, South Africa, ZimbabweTags: A Fork in the Road, A Journey into Parenthood, Afghanistan, AIDS, Alexander the Great, Andre Brink, Anso Thom, Biography, BOOK SA - News, Choice, Christopher Merrett, Crime, Dan Lazar, Disgrace, Egypt, Fiction, Greg Fried, Hamilton Wende, Harvill Secker, Health, Health-e News, HIV, House of War, Human & Rousseau, International, J. M. Coetzee, Jacana, James Kilgore, Janet van Eeden, JM Coetzee, Julia Denny-Dimitriou, Kerry Cullinan, Lisa Lazarus, Marie Heese, Moira Lovell, Non-fiction, not Fate, Oshun, Parenting, Penguin, Pharaoh, Pippa Green, Publisher, Roxanne, RW Johnson, Some Craciun, Some Editor, Some Illustrator, Some Other Editor, Some Other Illustrator, South Africa, South Africa's Brave New World, Stephanie Alexander, Stephen Coan, Subtitle, Summertime, Taliban, The Beloved Country Since the End of Apartheid, The biography of Trevor Manuel, The Book of Jacob, The Double Crown, The South African HIV/AIDS Mystery, The Virus, Umuzi, Vitamins and Vegetables, We are All Zimbabweans Now, Witness, Yves Vanderhaeghen, ZimbabweQuick URL Please register or log in to comment |
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Hamilton Wende on www.thrillerwriters.org |
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Tuesday, 01 December 2009 13:44 |
I love storytelling. It would literally be impossible to articulate the joy I feel each time I finish a story and look back over the work. Creating the characters' world and filling it with villains and trials is simply what I was born to do. But when I conversed with Hamilton Wende recently about his new release, House of War, I realized that my writer's journey has only been across the street compared to this author's life-altering travels.
Hamilton Wende is a freelance writer and television producer. He is a regular contributor to From Our Own Correspondent on Radio 4 on the BBC. He was born in the US but now lives and works in Johannesburg South Africa. He is the author of six books and he is a columnist for The Star in Johannesburg and his articles have appeared in many international and South African newspapers and magazines including National Geographic Traveler, The Chicago Tribune, GQ, Maclean's Magazine in Canada, TravelAfrica in the UK, The New Zealand Herald, The Buffalo News in the US, The Sunday Times, Business Day, The Sunday Independent in Johannesburg and many others. My first question, for which I absolutely had to have the answer, was how did you come to select the subject of Alexander the Great for this story? But then I could not know that answer without including another question. Had you spent a great deal of time intrigued by the history behind your subject before launching into the actual research for the novel? I was on the edge of my seat waiting for the answer and let me say, before you read on, this is an absolutely amazing answer...no, not an answer, this is an amazing story of its own. "I was born in Buffalo NY in 1961 and lived there for the first five years of my life until my parents got divorced and my mother remarried my wonderful stepfather and we came to live in Johannesburg South Africa. Sadly my father died when I was 13 but I have remained in pretty close contact with my uncles and aunts and cousins in the States. I went to the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg during the height of apartheid and left South Africa in 1985 while the country was under apartheid and came to live in New York - by way of a year's detour to teach English in Japan! "I really enjoyed living in the States, but in 1990 when Nelson Mandela was released, I found the pull to return to South Africa and to be a part of the changes here impossible to resist so I came back to SA in 1991 and, while I have travelled extensively and returned to the States often, my base has been Jo'burg. Having a dual identity has sometimes been confusing for me, but I always say that America is my inheritance while South Africa is my gift and I feel blessed to be a part of both of them. "I came to the story of Alexander and his love for his teen wife Roxanne, by way of one of those wonderful coincidences of life that you only see for their full value sometimes years later. I was working for NBC News in Afghanistan in 2001 during the initial invasion shortly after 9/11. Of course, those were frightening days for all of us and we really didn't know where our world was headed. Our team arrived in the village of Khudja Bahouddin in northern Afghanistan just hours before the first air and missile strikes were launched against the Taliban. A few days later we went to the front lines with a Northern Alliance escort. "Their tank emplacement was on a stark hill high above a beautiful valley where the Taliban were entrenched some distance away. A couple of shells were fired by the Northern Alliance commander and I was worried that the Taliban would fire back, so I was in quite a perplexed state of mind when one of the Northern Alliance soldiers said to me quite insistently 'Iskander, Iskander,' which of course, means 'Alexander' in Dari or Persian the language spoken by many of the ethnic Tajik Afghans in the Northern Alliance. I knew that Alexander the Great had been in Afghanistan, but I didn't really understand what he was getting at.
"Still, somehow, he was trying to make a connection with me, trying to tell me something that he was proud of, and it was only when I got back to Johannesburg and, months later, was doing some research on Alexander in Afghanistan that I came across an old copy of Scientific American in the library of my alma mater, Wits, and I saw an article about a lost city of Alexander the Great in northern Afghanistan called Ay Khanoum that I realized that what that soldier had been trying to tell me was that I had been standing there, on a city founded by Alexander and still remembered with pride by him and many other Afghans. "It was a tremendous coming together of personal coincidence, and both ancient and modern history and as I leafed through that old article, one of the last scholarly pieces of research published just after the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1979, the hairs on my arms tingled as I realized that I had the core of my story. What I had to do then was find Claire and Sebastian and Abdulov and go on the journey with them... "As you can tell I hadn't done much research until I came across that article and then the research really began! Of course, because I had travelled in Tajikistan, Uzbekistan and Afghanistan I had much of a sense of place, so the 'research' had already been done by my news work long before I began to write the novel. "I have also travelled extensively in Congo, Iraq, Zimbabwe and the States, so all of those places came alive, too, for me in the writing of this book. I find that I must have a deep sense of place to write properly. Part of the challenge of writing fiction is to give your readers a sense of possibility of other lives in other places and paradoxically to imagine, you need to have experienced." I cannot tell you how moved I was by this story. I had planned out several questions to ask but the answer to questions one and two said it all. This author wasn't simply born to write...he was born to merge the past with the present and to bring that incredible story to his readers. I did have the presence of mind to ask one last thing, can you share a bit about the next novel currently in the works? "My next novel has the working title of Only the Dead which is from the saying popularly attributed to Plato that 'only the dead have seen the end of war'. It will be set in eastern Congo, there will be a warlord called Faustin who like Goethe's Faust has two souls living in one heart. Susan, a psychologist from Johannesburg is an expert on the psychology of fear and has done a lot of work on the history of the mythology of the lion in human history and its symbolic link to our deepest sense of fear, and its flipside, the healing power of awe and wonder. She will be hired by the UN to help write a study of the psychology of child soldiers, many of whom are forced to fight for Faustin, who was also one of the men responsible for the genocide in Rwanda and is now living with his band of soldiers deep in the Congo forests. Chris is an ex-apartheid soldier who is hired by the UN to provide security for Susan and her team as they do their work with the children, and slowly they begin to uncover the depth of Faustin's greed and ruthlessness..." Debra Webb wrote her first story at age nine and her first romance at thirteen. It wasn't until she spent three years working for the military behind the Iron Curtain and within the confining political Walls of Berlin, Germany, that she realized her true calling. A five-year stint with NASA on the Space Shuttle Program reinforced her love of the endless possibilities within her grasp as a storyteller. A collision course between suspense and romance was set. Debra has been writing romantic suspense and action packed romantic thrillers since.
Patrons (Actives) Clive Cussler* Dirk Cussler* Faye and Jonathan Kellerman* John Lescroart* Karin Slaughter
Sponsors (Actives) Kathleen Antrim* David Baldacci* Steve Berry* Gary Braver* Sandra Brown* Dale Brown* John Case* Lee Child* Glenn Cooper Richard Curtis* Jack F. Du Brul* David Dun* Joseph Finder* Brian Garfield* Tess Gerritsen* Leslie Glass* Vicki Hinze* | Lisa Jackson Alex Kava* Deborah LeBlanc Eric Van Lustbader* D.P. Lyle, M.D.* Gayle Lynds* Steve Martini Brad Meltzer David Morrell* Katherine Neville* James Patterson* Andrew Peterson Douglas Preston* Christopher Reich* James Rollins* M.J. Rose* JoAnn Ross Hank Phillippi Ryan John Saul* Susan Arnout Smith R.L. Stine* Brad Thor* | Supporters (Actives) Steve Alten* Ted Bell* Emily Benedek Janet Berliner-Gluckman* Allison Brennan Jan Burke* Lorenzo Carcaterra Lincoln Child* Stephen Coonts* Brian DAmato Eileen Dreyer* Linda Fairstein* Vince Flynn* Chris Fox Joel Goldman* Heather Graham* Thomas Greanias Humphrey Hawksley *original member joined by June 4, 2005
| Bonnie Hearn Hill* Alan Jacobson Judith Kelman* Harley Jane Kozak Jon Land* Dennis Lynds* Francine Mathews* Kyle Mills* Twist Phelan Christopher Rice* James Siegel* Taylor Smith* Carl T. Smith* Mariah Stewart* Peter Straub* M. Diane Vogt* Stuart Woods* | Patrons (Associates) Tucker Andersen Sponsors (Associates) Maria Carvainis Leisure Books* Ed Mitchell* Henry Morrison* Adrian Muller* Bill Sewell Tor/Forge Books* Supporters (Associates) Linda Adams* Brilliance Audio* Emory Hackman* Inkwell Management, LLC* Mario Mastro L.A. Starks The Mystery Bookstore |
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