From the bestselling author of The Monk of Mokha and The Circle comes a taut, suspenseful story of two foreigners’ role in a nation’s fragile peace.An unnamed country is leaving the darkness of a decade at war, and to commemorate the armistice the government commissions a new road connecting two halves of the state. Two men, foreign contractors from the same company, are sent to finish the … company, are sent to finish the highway. While one is flighty and adventurous, wanting to experience the nightlife and people, the other wants only to do the work and go home. But both men must eventually face the absurdities of their positions, and the dire consequences of their presence. With echoes of J. M. Coetzee and Graham Greene, this timeless novel questions whether we can ever understand another nation’s war, and what role we have in forging anyone’s peace.
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The Parade is a heartbreaker and a mindbender. It is a novel of ideas that packs an emotional punch that left me reeling. With clear, unadorned prose, Eggers lays bare the costs of war, and of peace.
Not to my liking
Once again Dave Eggers shares with us the comedy and tragedy of the human condition things appear different then we expect in his latest novel we see this all too well Technology can be a blessing or a curse a brilliant narrative when our thoughts and reality fail to mesh
Tear out the last page of the book. Don’t read it!
Mr. Eggers spent 200 pages building characters that were edgy, quirky, and powerful in a world that was poignant and honest. Then he turned the whole thing into worthless pile crap. I was disappointed and annoyed—and not at the plot or the ending—but at the author for being such a wimp. Instead of trusting the characters and the story, he took the easy exit.
Mr. Eggers, you can do better. C-
Rating up to the next-to-last page: 5 Stars.
Rating for the last page: 0 Stars.
~D. L. Orton, author of the best-selling Between Two Evils series. Get the 1st book in the series for free: Crossing In Time: An Edgy Love Story (Between Two Evils Book 1)!
Four just wanted to do his job. He operated a state-of-the-art paver and he had a schedule to meet. He was to pave a road that would connect two halves of a country, the rebels at one end and the modern city and army at the other end. He was to keep to himself, not get involved, just do his duty and go home.
Nine had other ideas. He was to ride ahead and remove anything that might hinder Four’s advancement. But Nine was a free spirit. He chatted up the locals, ate at their fires and went to bed with their women. He made connections.
Four couldn’t control Nine. If he reported Nine’s misadventures it would make Four look bad. Nine’s behavior brought a crisis when he came down deathly ill, forcing Four to accept the help of locals to save his life.
This short novel is an extended parable. What interests me is that the title is not ‘The Road’ or a reference to Four and Nine’s divergent attitudes towards the people they met who have endured war but still offer hospitality. No, it is called The Parade.
Four’s time schedule must be met because there is a parade scheduled by the general in the city at the other end of the road. The road’s completion is to be celebrated. Four completely believes in the road’s peaceable purpose of bringing progress to the rural bush folk. He has bought the story of the celebration.
The twisted, dark ending was almost expected.
In some ways, Four’s faith in his supposed peaceful purpose recalled to mind another novel I recently read, The Cassandra by Sharma Shields, in which a young woman finds work at a government facility working on something that will end WWII. She completely buys into her work and purpose until she discovers what it is that will end the war–the Atom Bomb.
I have always wondered how people can participate in industries that manufacture products of destruction. How do they justify their work? Do they willingly believe some fantasy? Do they push the purpose out of their minds?
How hard it must be to discover too late what you have done. It is easier to believe in a fantasy parade.
I received a free ebook through First to Read in exchange for a fair and unbiased review.
This is a tale for our time, an allegory about intervening in foreign lands without knowledge, and so a nightmare vision of our endless wars.
A parable of progress, as told by J.M. Coetzee to Philip K. Dick.