About this deal
A novel which continues the saga of Henry Wilt, an innate coward and hen-pecked husband whose escapades include a drunken (and very painful) battle with a rosebush, an all-consuming infatuation with an overseas student, and becoming an unwilling participant in an armed siege. LP (1983)! D. Open 7 days a week. Call us on: +442033020460 resistant glass, a Matte board surrounding your chosen image, as well as M. V. The 'singles' title underplays it.
Reviews
Harry Brindley
I read this as a young South African living under apartheid in the 70s. Sex across the colour line was considered immoral under apartheid, so when Kommandent Els learns that White Ms Hazelstone killed her Black cook in a crime of passion — having humped the man since she was widowed — the cop believes the explicit revelations, which are hilariously funny, would collapse their pure-blooded social structure and disgrace his city, so he decides to cover up the crime.
Take a wild ride on the funny side of a dark time in South Africa’s history that everyone can learn-and-laugh from! It's an hilarious take-down of a failed system that is laugh out loud funny.
At first glance, a white South African author writing satirically about apartheid may seem inappropriate — until you read it. The absurdity of it gave me hope that the system would not last -- although it did, for another two decades.
Sharpe lampoons the shenanigans of the South African Police, in the person of one Kommandent Els in particular, in the imaginary town of Piemburg — which is based on the real city of Pietermartitzburg which I once lived in.