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  • Fw: Book Review-Very Interesting.


    WHO'S KRIKOR MACKERTICH ?

    Subj: Economist Book Review

    Jul 22nd 2010

    Right on the money Inheritance. By Nicholas Shakespeare. Harvill
    Secker; 272 pages; £12.99. Buy from Amazon.co.uk

    NICHOLAS SHAKESPEARE'S new novel, `Inheritance', begins with a
    wandering in the wilderness; a four-page piece of bravura writing in
    which a driven man crosses mountain and desert to peg out an
    Australian mineral claim that will yield 1,000m tonnes of high-grade
    iron ore. He calls it Mt Ararat, which should not be forgotten.

    `Inheritance' is full of such clues. The miner, son of
    Australian-Armenians, is a smart if naive boy with an iron will and a
    heart that is easily broken. By the time he dies he has morphed into a
    discreet and elegant Englishman by the name of Christopher
    Madigan. Rich beyond his immigrant parents' wildest imaginings,
    Madigan leaves half his fortune to his housekeeper and the other half,
    randomly at his own request, to the first person who appears at his
    funeral. Madigan's estranged daughter, Jeanine, arrives late, to her
    cost.

    This narrative sleight of hand allows for the entry into the story of
    Andy Larkham, the accidental heir. Like the heroes in Mr Shakespeare's
    other novels, Larkham is unsure of himself, stuck in a dead-end job
    and with a fiancée who is about to ditch him, but at heart he is an
    intelligent and romantic chap. Madigan's back story is also the story
    of Larkham's maturing as he grapples with the eternal question of who
    he wants to be while getting used to having £17m in the bank.

    In lesser hands this might have been just a cheap literary trick. But
    Mr Shakespeare (pictured) is a novelist of considerable talent, and
    his evocation of Krikor Makertich, the grandson of an Armenian woman
    made pregnant by a man who raped her, and his metamorphosis into
    Madigan, the English gent, is a study in persuasion and
    suspense. Thoughtful and beautifully observed,

    `Inheritance' takes one of the darkest episodes of the 20th
    century-the Armenians' history at the hands of the Turks-and explores
    the gamble that is man's existence on earth.

    Never predictable, this novel combines a remarkable narrative force
    with the lightest of touches. A book to savour and pass on.




    From: A. Papazian
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