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Snakepit [Hardcover]

Moses Isegawa (Author)
3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)


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Book Description

March 16, 2004
From the author of Abyssinian Chronicles (“one of the most impressive works of fiction to have ever come out of Africa”—Kirkus Reviews), a powerful new novel set in Uganda in the 1970s—a dark picaresque that brilliantly depicts the life and death of a nation run by men gorged on power and paranoia.
Bat Katanga is a Ugandan just returned to his homeland after two years in Britain. While he completed a postgraduate degree at Cambridge, he watched from afar as “flag independence [gave] way to economic independence” in Uganda, his chances to make a fortune there increasing with each “reform” imposed by Idi Amin. Now, when Bat lands a job as Bureaucrat Two in the Ministry of Power and Communications, he feels himself entering the top echelons of government, his sense of honor and honesty firmly intact: “Everything seemed to have been building to this moment, his triumphant entry into the bastions of power.” But when he is threatened into taking a bribe from a Saudi prince, he unwittingly begins a journey—both psychological and physical—into the darkest and most dangerous precincts of the madness that was Amin’s Uganda.

As Bat’s life begins to unravel, we see the men and women whose lives intersect his: General Bazooka, his superior at the ministry—“a creature of people’s fears and prejudices”—a man slowly losing Amin’s approval, and with it any sense of safety or sanity; Victoria, who bears both Bat’s child and a deadly grudge against him; Bat’s family and friends, coping with the advantages and disadvantages of connection to someone in high places; Bat’s wife, Babit, who pays the ultimate price for his mistakes; Robert Ashes, the mercenary Englishman who insinuates himself into Amin’s trust—and who will be the only one left standing after Amin’s downfall.

Snakepit is an extraordinarily revealing, deeply humanizing exploration of the experience of virulent corruption. It is a fiercely compelling novel.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

The author of 2000's Abyssinian Chronicles sets another ambitious narrative of trouble and turmoil near the end of Idi Amin's dictatorship in Uganda, a country "like a madwoman of untold beauty; efforts to save her were bound to be doomed." Bat Katanga, native son and recent postgraduate student at Cambridge University, returns to Uganda to seek his fortune during the chaotic scramble for economic independence and personal enrichment in the 1970s. His education and intelligence immediately—albeit slightly improbably—land him a high-level job in the Ministry of Power and Communications, working for the bloodthirsty, power-hungry General Bazooka, head of the corrupt Anti-Smuggling Unit. The notorious excesses and infighting of the Amin regime are detailed from General Bazooka's perspective as well as that of several others, including beautiful Victoria, the general's former mistress who's now angling for Bat, and mercenary Englishman Robert Ashes, who intends to come out on top, no matter what the cost. When Bat is intimidated into taking a bribe from a Saudi official, the general, whose own standing is in question, has him abducted. In prison, Bat, who is nearly as calculating and Machiavellian as his employers, is forced to re-evaluate everything. Even after his release, the downward trajectory of his life continues, while the country itself plunges toward anarchy. This is a headlong and blurry novel filled with violence and sex, deceit and revenge—a messy, captivating portrait of a desperate time and place.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

It reads like a macabre horror tale--the special agent comes home to find his wife with her head cut off--but the fiction is grounded in the facts of Idi Amin's dictatorship in Uganda in the 1970s, when atrocity was "business as usual." The story begins with Bat Katanga, back from Cambridge University with a math degree, who lands a terrific government job in the bureaucracy. He has an affair with a woman sent to spy on him, gets drawn into power games, and confronts hideous brutality everywhere. Novelist Isegawa lived in Uganda then, and he is not afraid to name names, including those of international banks and foreign governments who did nothing to stop the killings and sometimes benefited from the chaos. The horror of brutal dictatorship has become all too familiar across the globe, and the political narrative here is as gripping as the intensely personal viewpoints of Bat's family, friends, and enemies. The portrait of Bat is unforgettable, a decent guy who somehow finds himself part of the corruption, almost by default. Hazel Rochman
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 272 pages
  • Publisher: Knopf (March 16, 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0375414541
  • ISBN-13: 978-0375414541
  • Product Dimensions: 8.7 x 5.9 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,081,524 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Average Customer Review
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Decadence and Violence of Amin's Regime, June 9, 2004
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This review is from: Snakepit (Hardcover)
This superb novel of the final days of Idi Amin's despotic regime in Uganda captures the inhumanity of absolute power in horrifying detail. Bat Katanga, a graduate of Cambridge, returns to his homeland and a job at the Ministry of Power and Communication to seek his fortune. The man who hires him, General Bazooka, has done so to undo him, for Bazooka is sensitive about his own lack of education as well as Bat's privileged southern roots and wants to see Bat - and the part of Uganda he represents - to fail. Bat, of course, has no clue; he is more interested in the expensive house and XJ10 that await him. Unfortunately for Bat, Bazooka is as brutal as Bat is naive. When a third man, a white man named Ashes becomes Marshal Amin's confidante, Bat becomes a pawn in a battle of power-grubbing one-upmanship that puts everything he values in jeopardy. As author Isegawa takes the reader into the minds of these men and their lovers, family, and those who surround them, a full, unsettling picture of tyranny emerges. In this country ruled by murder and revenge, no one is safe.

Moses Isegawa writes with stunning clarity and force, faltering only slightly at the end with scenes that would be dramatic in any other novel but which are anticlimactic given what has occurred before. His most amazing achievement is the descent into the minds of brutes to make them understandable even if they are wholly despicable. The weaving of these multiple stories - Bat's, Bazooka's, and others - is seamless, as everything points toward the fall of Idi Amin's hedonistic and unforgiving regime.

I cannot recommend this novel highly enough. Its bold look at a country ruled by brutality adds a surprisingly human dimension to outright inhumanity. Readers of Nuruddin Farah's LINKS, which details an intellectual in the midst of Somalia's civil war, will find many similarities, although the two novels belong distinctively to their respective authors and homelands.

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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A Muddled Tale of Evil, December 28, 2004
This review is from: Snakepit (Hardcover)
The modern history of the region now known as Uganda is utterly dominated by the bizarre and terrifying rule of that most clownish of despots, Idi Amin. In this, his second novel, Isegawa attempts to explore the notion of individual responsibility under such a regime. The main protagonist in this story is recent Cambridge graduate Bat Katanga, a math whiz who returns to his native country around 1973, just after Amin has kicked out the many Indians who lived there. Seeing opportunity in the misfortune of these others, Bat manages to land a high position in the MInistry of Power and Communication. The other primary player in the story is Bat's patron, General "Bazooka", who is cut of an altogether different cloth. One of the highly uneducated army officers from the South who stormed the palace in the 1971 Amin-led coup that removed Prime Minister Milton Obote, the General is an established member of the dictator's inner circle.

The duo's stories, and that of many members of their two families (and not a few other people) provide plenty of material for Isegawa to paint a very grim portrait of Uganda under Amin. Arbitrary violence, Caligulan decadence, and thoroughly pervasive corruption started at the very top and filtered through the entire ruling structure. The hollowness of civic institutions and the proliferation of guns led to an utter breakdown in civil society, which in turn led to cycles of revenge. As if this wasn't enough, an increasingly cocaine-addicted Amin relied more heavily on his two strange advisors: the renown astrologer Dr. Ali ($10,000 session) and the cunning Englishman Robert Ashes (modeled after the real-life adventurer Bob Astles, who became Amin's confidante). While all this certainly makes great material for a writer, the novel suffers from several flaws.

One of these is Isegawa's decision to blend fact and fiction to ill effect. It's not clear why he's created this character of Ashes, when the real-life Astles was such a strange story unto himself. Similarly, Idi Amin's real antics were so outlandish that there's no need for Isegawa to have invented new ones, such as the notion that Amin made several movies in Hollywood where he starred as Mussolini, or that he released a banknote showing him using Europe as a cesspit. A second, and more major flaw, is Isegawa's inability to stay in once place or with one character for very long. The book has no rhythm or pace whatsoever, lurching from scene to scene and character to character in its attempt to paint a broad picture. (A more cohesive fictional examination of Amin's rule is Giles Foden's "The Last King of Scotland".) Finally, the book is rather confusing when it comes to who has the ability to do what. For example, sometimes General Bazooka can perpetrate the most heinous outrages, and other times not. It's never clear why Ashes is considered untouchable some of the time, and not others.

In the end, these flaws don't obscure the book's true theme, which is an exploration of how people respond to despotism and brutality. Although they are carefully constructed to come from opposite backgrounds, Isegawa seems to be saying that both the General and Bat are complicit in the evil regime. In other words, while the violent thug is easily recognizable as evil, the intellectual whose "victimless" work supports the regime is perhaps equally evil. And naturally, in the end, it is the innocent who suffer most of all.

PS. For a "where are they now" glimpse of Amin's exile in Saudi Arabia before his death last year, see Italian journalist Ricardo Orizio's fascinating book "Talk of the Devil."
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Ugandan Frederick Forsythe, April 13, 2006
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S.A.I (Washington DC) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Snakepit: A Novel (Paperback)
This is my first book by this author and I happened to pick it out at my local library. It is basically a story about government and bureaucratic corruption. Being a fellow african, like the author, I can only agree that such a story can only be told authentically from first hand experience. I originally come from a country that has known power-crazy, bloodthirsty military leaders and still knows dire corruption.

This writer's rendition of the bloody and dirty politics of the self-proclaimed Marshall Idi Amin's regime is all too familiar and is written excellently. I also like the book's paper type.

However, that is the only strength of the book. Everything else seems fake and contrived. General Bazooka's hatred of Bat is totally unexplained. I did not buy Bat's imprisonment. He wasn't even tortured at first. It's like the writer remembered at the last minute that political prisoners in Africa arent handled with kid gloves and then decided to make the rest of Bat's prison stay unpleasant, the English MP friend was unrealistically handy to facilitate Bat's release, the courthouse antics of Victoria struck me as clownish, foolish and unreal. I also didnt feel any genuine affection for Bat and Babit as a couple and the descrition of their trip to England was hollow. Also, Bat's daughter was never mentioned again. The entire plot was a mess, the ending glossed over.

On a whole it was like a bad version of a good Frederick Forsythe book, with a Ugandan flavour.
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Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
general bazooka, robert ashes
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
State Research Bureau, Big Bossman, Major Ozi, Anti Smuggling Unit, Copper Motors, Saudi Arabia, State House, General Fart, Mau Mau, Vice President, Ministry of Power, Mabira Forest, The Boomerang, British Embassy, Unholy Spirit, Barclays Bank, Nile Perch Hotel, Defence Council, Damon Villeneuve, South Africa, Marshal Amin
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