Thursday, December 1, 2011

Patrick McGuiness - The Last Hundred Days

Only one hundred days before the downfall of Ceausescu's remige the book's protagonist arrives in Bucharest to start working at the local university. While following his fate the reader gets to know a country in change. The regime is still swinging the iron fist in a society of corruption and fear. Dissidents are in constant danger of the Securitate, Ceausescu's secret police, that casts a cold shadow over Romania. He gets to know both sides of society: gim poverty is contrasted by the luxurious life of those privileged who are able to get everything they desire. Meanwhile, the shops for ordinary people are empty and the city is scarred by the demolition caused by Ceausescu's gangs. The protagonist, protected by his status as a foreign lecturer, is able to learn of all aspects of the late Romania. He gets to know dissidents as well as stallwarts of Ceausescu, poor as well as those privileged.
In his semi-biographic novel Patrick McGuinnes manages to describe the doomed society lively and enables his readers to travel a city and a country that no longer exist. He telly a story that still isn't familar with many in the western world.