Anthony Burgess : Malayan Trilogy
Don't laugh at butterflies!
That may be the only bit of useful advice I take away from the colorful story of one Victor Crabbe - a British colonial educator who is comprehensively humiliated by the author in this tour of the Malaysia during its first year of independence.
He's a well intentioned imperialist who tries to help the people of the protectorate instead of extract its wealth - but he loses everything except his idealism: his job, his mistress, his wife, his car, and eventually his life.
In each of the three episodes he is paired with a comic character: a British NCO who wants nothing more from life than a cold bottle of beer -- a British attorney who marries a wealthy Muslim woman to bail out his failing practice - and a Malayan minor government worker who is on a vendetta against a Tamil whom he believes got him fired. None of them, except the alcoholic soldier ends up getting what he wants. (the soldier wins the lottery)
There's kind of a dark, hip sense of humor about it all that reminds me Blake Edwards.
There's also an ongoing fascination with all the languages involved in this multi-ethnic country: Maylasian, Tamil, Urdu, Chinese, English.
Unlike the Somerset Maugham stories of East, the reader is taken out of the English club and dumped rudely onto the hectic streets -- and some effort is made to develop non-British characters.
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