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The Last Hundred Days: A Novel [Paperback]

Patrick McGuinness
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)

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Book Description

May 22, 2012

Once the gleaming "Paris of the East," Bucharest in 1989 is a world of corruption and paranoia, in thrall to the repressive regime of Nicolae Ceausescu. Old landmarks are falling to demolition crews, grocery shelves are empty, and informants are everywhere. Into this state of crisis, a young British man arrives to take a university post he never interviewed for. He is taken under the wing of Leo O’Heix, a colleague and master of the black market, and falls for the sleek Celia, daughter of a party apparatchik. Yet he soon learns that in this society, friendships are compromised, and loyalty is never absolute. And as the regime’s authority falters, he finds himself uncomfortably, then dangerously, close to the eye of the storm.

By turns thrilling and satirical, studded with poetry and understated revelation, The Last Hundred Days captures the commonplace terror of Cold War Eastern Europe. Patrick McGuinness’s first novel is unforgettable.


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Editorial Reviews

Review

Longlisted for the Man Booker Prize
Shortlisted for the Costa First Novel Award
Shortlisted for the Desmond Elliot Prize
 
"[McGuinness] is observant, reflective, witty and precise. He is capable of combining the essayistic, the lyrical, the humorous and the aphoristic, sometimes within a single paragraph... An incisive and engaging account of a society and a historical period that is essential to remember, especially now." - Francine Prose, New York Times Book Review
 
"[A] memorable story about a pivotal moment in history." - Kevin Canfield, Kansas City Star
 
 

About the Author

Patrick McGuinness was born in Tunisia in 1968 and lived in Bucharest in the years leading up to the Romanian revolution. He is a professor of French and comparative literature at Oxford University and a fellow of St. Anne's College. As a poet, he has won an Eric Gregory Award and Poetry magazine's Levinson Prize. His latest collection, Jilted City, was a Poetry Book Society Recommendation. McGuinness lives between Oxford and North West Wales. His web site is www.patrickmcguinness.org.uk.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 384 pages
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury USA; Reprint edition (May 22, 2012)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1608199126
  • ISBN-13: 978-1608199129
  • Product Dimensions: 8.3 x 5.5 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 12 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #160,719 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

4.6 out of 5 stars
(10)
4.6 out of 5 stars
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The story is gripping and the characters are extremely well drawn. Kathleen W Shepherd  |  2 reviewers made a similar statement
True serendipity - picked the book up completely by chance and turned out t be a page-turner and a gem! Medh Nehal Hemant  |  1 reviewer made a similar statement
Most Helpful Customer Reviews
16 of 17 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Evocative - feels like non-fiction September 2, 2011
By Ripple
Format:Kindle Edition
"The Last Hundred Days" in question here are the final days of Ceau'escu's Romania in late 1989. Narrated by an unnamed young British expat who has a job offer from the English department of Bucharest University, despite never having interviewed for the job, we get an insight into the life under communist rule as Eastern bloc countries all around start to open up after the fall of the Berlin Wall. We are told that McGuinness lived in Romania in the years leading up to the revolution, and this is no surprise as there is an authenticity here that could only have come from some level of inside knowledge.

It's a fascinating insight, and one which I enjoyed very much, although there are a few qualms that are worth pointing out. For a start McGuinness takes quite a while for the story to get going. This is his first novel and he is apparently also a poet and this comes as no surprise in the first 50 or so pages as he never misses an opportunity to provide a metaphor or simile in his descriptions that can lead to the book seeming a little "over-written".

However the biggest challenge is that the book has a fairly tenuous relationship to anything that would conventionally be called a plot. The narrator's experience has moments that might be considered to be a plot-line as he finds out what is happening to friends he meets, but the driver of the action in the historic events. This is a problem as we all know what happened and in fact while there were signs of some changes during the last one hundred days, when the end came it was all rather sudden. Neither does our narrator seem to have much to do in his job - he meets some students outside the university and frankly it is difficult to see how he knew who they were. You might also argue that a junior, expat teacher wouldn't have access to the relatively senior members of the regime that this book suggests.

Yet for all this, it doesn't read like a work of fiction. It reads more like a cocktail of one part Le Carré, one part one of those accounts by British journalists of the last days of a regime and, what makes this so readable, one part Bill Bryson at his light hearted best at pointing out the ridiculousness of situations. The Bryson element is provided by the narrator's expat friend, Leo, another teacher in the department who has all the best lines. Leo is involved in the black market and has enough detachment to comment on things but enough inside information to know what's going on.

McGuinness portrays very well the danger and corruption of the regime and what it is like when everyone is watching everyone else and no one can be trusted. We see a mixture of dissidents, party apparatchiks, spies and ordinary people struggling to protect their own interests under Ceau'escu's crazy world. Of course, like any good Eastern bloc story, we also get the "man from the ministry", here in the form of a fairly ineffective British diplomat who is also struggling to make sense of what is happening.

It's a difficult book to categorise. It is fiction, but it feels like non-fiction. It has spy elements, but it isn't a conventional spy plot of good versus evil. It is often satirical and funny, but the situation is far from that. After a slow beginning, I was hooked.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
By 1989 Nicolae Ceausescu had been the communist ruler of Romania for twenty-four years. This was to be his last year. Focusing on Ceausescu's last hundred days, author Patrick McGuinness recreates all the forces leading to the overthrow of the government, telling his story through the eyes of an unnamed twenty-one-year-old speaker from the UK. To escape terribly memories at home, the young man applied for a foreign posting and was given a job teaching English in Bucharest, a job for which he had neither applied nor appeared for an interview.

In Bucharest his mentor, Leo O'Heix, shows him "the Paris of the East," which now more clearly resembles "a deserted funfair." The elegant Capsa Hotel, where the waiters have been trained in French manners, serves Chateaubriand "while in the shops beyond, unstacked shelves gleamed under twists of flypaper and the crimeless streets shouldered their burden of emptiness." At Capsa, the party faithful and the moneyed come to make connections, negotiate personal deals, and enjoy food not available anywhere else. "It's all here, passion, intimacy, human fellowship," Leo tells him. "You just need to adapt to the circumstances...it's a bit of a grey area to be honest. Actually...it's all grey area round here," but this is "the Romanian way," the speaker learns, and it is adapt or get out. Leo has adapted to Romanian life completely - he is Bucharest's biggest black-marketeer.

Gradually, Bucharest comes to life (and death) through the speaker's eyes. The city is being bulldozed at a rapid rate, and the old architectural monuments and historical buildings are being replaced with cheap, modern buildings. Shop signs appear on new buildings, but the shops are empty. Hungry people wait for hours in long lines, only to discover that it has run out. Even the headstones have disappeared from cemeteries, removed by the government for use in building the People's Palace, a colossal monument begun in 1983 and second in size only to the U.S. Pentagon. The "velvet revolution" has started everywhere except Romania - East Germany, Poland, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, and even Russia - yet Ceausescu remains in power here.

The author does a remarkable job of recreating Bucharest, which is really the main character here, a place with incredible resilience, around which all the human characters revolve as the author connects them with the city's history, its communist functionaries, its "flexible" morality, and its often inflexible laws and dictates. The speaker finds himself growing up as he makes choices or has them made for him, and he eventually adapts to being followed. No one is who s/he seems to be, and the tension rises as the speaker and his friends find themselves in increasingly fraught circumstances. The reader, familiar with the characters, comes to know and expect them to act in particular ways, but often discovers at the last minute betrayals have occurred. The author is particularly realistic in making no real value judgments about most of these characters, even those who may act "unethically." In times of such crisis, who knows what any of us would do, he seems to suggest. Subtle, often humorous, and profoundly ironic, this is a unique approach to a study of a city in the midst of evolution and then revolution and its aftermath, and none of the characters here will remain unchanged. Fascinating on all levels. Mary Whipple
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Shades of Gray January 15, 2012
Format:Kindle Edition
The nations of the former Soviet Union always come across in fiction as bleak, gray, and dispiriting. The Bucharest of 1989 in McGuinness' novel is indeed one big surreal, gray backdrop. Nicolae Ceau'escu's sinister state has always intrigued me more than other Eastern European nations during the Cold War. It is a study in the pursuit of absolute power along with the associated ironies, inconsistencies, and major hypocrisies. The story follows a young Englishman who plunges into the culture, politics, and underground economies that are rapidly coming to an end. That the Romanian leader was so unaware of the reality of his position astounds in history and in fiction.

The book was wildly entertaining and lays bare both the triumph and troubles of regime change. It moves with speed and all characters are plausible avatars for real historical players. Aspects of the tone and atmosphere reminded me of Olen Steinhauer's five book series covering a fictional Eastern European nation through decades of Soviet stewardship, as well, the plot it is not unlike The Last King of Scotland except the main character does not directly rub shoulders with Comrade Ceau'escu (or his bizarre wife). I am very pleased to have found this novel and recommend it especially to those interested in this period of history.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars Good
This item was just as it was described in the posting and I was very happy with the quality. Thanks!
Published 4 months ago by Andrew Collier
4.0 out of 5 stars "Atrocities and Absurdities"
This is a vivid and intelligent fictional account of the atrocities and absurdities of a dying Marxist police state as seen by an insightful British university instructor. Read more
Published 5 months ago by Cary B. Barad
5.0 out of 5 stars Can't put it down
I got the Kindle version and can't put it down. We were in Bucharest as part of a trip last year and learned some of this history. Read more
Published 7 months ago by Lea
5.0 out of 5 stars A wonderful visit to a different place and time
I loved this book! I worked in Bucharest in 2003-2007, a very different time from the 1989 setting of the book, but as they say, the more things change, the more they stay the... Read more
Published 8 months ago by Kathleen W Shepherd
4.0 out of 5 stars An alternate universe in real life
This novel seems to capture the dislocation that occurs when trajectories cross...sort of makes you wish that you were there but not really. Read more
Published 8 months ago by William T. Wildman
4.0 out of 5 stars Excellent look at Romania
Enjoyed this book immensely. It proved to be a great read, showing what Romania must have been like during the terrible times of Ceaucescu.
Published 8 months ago by Susan from Perth
5.0 out of 5 stars Poetic, human and insightful. Brilliant!
Wow! What a book. About the last 100 days of Rumanian Communism. Gripping and humanised (though fictionalised) account of history written with a poetic flair! Read more
Published 15 months ago by Medh Nehal Hemant
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