From Publishers Weekly
The Western idea of exoticism is turned upside down in A Girl from Zanzibar, a cool, cosmopolitan novel by Roger King (Sea Level, etc.). Marcella D'Souza, a "Goan Indian Portuguese Arab African of Catholic Moslem parentage," displays early entrepreneurial talent, running a small taxi business and then an ice cream stand with her aunt in Zanzibar. She soon seizes the chance to move to London, where she parlays her skills into a small real estate empire and becomes involved with Benji, a Singaporean Indian who hatches grand, shady international schemes. An unfortunate encounter lands Marcella in jail for eight years, and when she gets out she wangles herself a job as an associate professor of Multicultural Studies at a small college in Vermont. From this college she reflects on the odd twists and turnings of her life, the strangest perhaps being her sojourn in snowy, peaceful-and yes, exotic-Vermont.
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal
Marcella D'Souza's migratory life takes her from her native Zanzibar to London and Vermont as she falls in love with an arms dealer, works as a real estate broker, and eventually builds a fortune. Of mixed Goan, Arab, Portuguese, and East African descent, Marcella is beautiful, bright, and business-minded. But she quickly loses everything when she is arrested and wrongly convicted of a drug charge. While in prison for eight years, Marcella gets a formal education and later becomes a college professor of multicultural studies. At the end of this fascinating tale, she is on the road again, traveling all over America and still searching for a place to call home. Born in England and himself well traveled over four continents, King offers wonderful descriptions of distant places. The easy, fluid writing style of his other novels (e.g., Horizontal Hotel) is evident here. Recommended for public and academic libraries.
Lisa Rohrbaugh, East Palestine Memorial P.L., OHCopyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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