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Explorers of the New Century

A Novel

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
“A masterfully realized comic novel . . . like something out of Gulliver’s Travels by way of Franz Kafka and P. G. Wodehouse” (Library Journal).
 
Set at the dawn of the great age of exploration—closely resembling the era of Shackleton and Perry and Scott—two intrepid teams of adventurers set off through an arid, lifeless landscape. Both are vying to reach the AFP, or Agreed Furthest Point—a worthy, even ennobling cause. The competition is friendly but conditions are extreme. To get through the race, both teams must learn to make sacrifices, and rely heavily on their mules for survival . . . a dependency that will come with a price.
 
From the Man Booker Prize–nominated author of The Forensic Records Society and The Restraint of Beasts—a novel Thomas Pynchon called a “demented, deadpan-comic wonder”—Explorers of the New Century offers a blend of white-knuckle suspense, shocking revelations, and brilliant social satire.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      November 28, 2005
      In this acidly allegorical fancy, two unidentified nations at an unidentified time send coordinated expeditions into an uninhabited place of extreme weather—"the Agreed Furthest Point from Civilization." After arrival at camp, and a minor mishap that injures a mule (which has to be destroyed), the British-seeming team sets out, taking a difficult route over scree-strewn hillocks; the Scandinavian-seeming team, a few days ahead, progresses up a dry river bed. Given the polar explorer motif, questions begin to nag. Why does no one mention the poles? Where is the ice? Where are the sled dogs, and why are both expeditions encumbered with mule trains? Answers present themselves as we become familiar, through indirect hints, with the manner in which the mules have become a burden for both societies. One day, as disaster strikes the British party, a crew member and several mules drown—and one of the mules speaks. Mills (The Restraint of Beasts
      ) expertly wields a narrow-bandwidth prose that hides distortions of reality in its very matter-of-factness. The effect is similar to the way old painters used to put anamorphic skulls in the foreground of their paintings: when we finally understand what we are seeing, it creates a backward-crashing estrangement from any sense of normalcy.

    • Library Journal

      January 15, 2006
      This is a masterfully realized comic novel that is like something out of "Gulliver's Travels" by way of Franz Kafka and P.G. Wodehouse. Mills ("Three To See the King"), a former London bus driver, is known for his surrealist comedies, and this latest work may well be his best. "Explorers" is a kind of lighthearted, absurdist homage to intrepid European explorers like Roald Amundsen and Robert Falcon Scott, who in 1911 engaged in a race to the South Pole. The two protagonists strive to reach a remote, inhospitable, unexplored destination. Each man leads a team through torturous terrain and impossible ordeals with the ultimate goal too preposterous to summarize here (it involves mules). Mills's touch is light and generous, and there is much that is inspiring about the characters, particularly their humility and courage. What's more, these men face hardship and misfortune while remaining steadfastly courteous and professional. A delight from start to finish, with superb dialog and an endearing cast of characters, this novel is enthusiastically recommended." -Patrick Sullivan, Manchester Community Coll., CT"

      Copyright 2006 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      February 15, 2006
      Since his first novel, " The Restraint of Beasts" (1998), was short-listed for the Booker Prize, Mills' reputation has rapidly risen, and his works have been widely translated. A signature feature of his narratives is a penchant for black comedy veiled in disarmingly minimalist prose. His latest novel takes that to its deadpan limits. In a deceptively straightforward plot, two expeditions of nineteenth-century explorers, one apparently British, the other Scandinavian, both accompanied by mules, blaze separate trails deep into a bleak wilderness in a race to pinpoint the Agreed Furthest Point from Civilization. Despite relentless winds, dwindling rations, and the loss of several mules, their exploratory resolve remains strong, albeit tainted by some decidedly strange motives. For it soon becomes more and more clear that the "mules" aren't what one would normally assume, and the expeditions are less noble acts of discovery than attempts to relieve society of an annoying ethnic burden. A slyly original critique of racism and the pretensions behind civilization's zeal for moral uplift. (Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2006, American Library Association.)

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