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Divided Kingdom by Rupert Thomson — book cover

Divided Kingdom

by Rupert Thomson
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Overview

One night a boy who comes to be called Thomas Parry is taken from his family, caught up in a comprehensive unraveling of what had been a united kingdom. Reacting to their country’s inexorable decline into consumerism, turpitude, racism, and violence, the powers that be establish four independent republics based on the perceived nature of the citizens assigned to each. These new partitions are reinforced with concrete barricades and razor wire.

Renamed, relocated, and granted favored status, Thomas enjoys one success after another until, working as a devoted civil servant, he suddenly falls out of the system entirely.

Synopsis

One night a boy who comes to be called Thomas Parry is taken from his family, caught up in a comprehensive unraveling of what had been a united kingdom. Reacting to their country’s inexorable decline into consumerism, turpitude, racism, and violence, the powers that be establish four independent republics based on the perceived nature of the citizens assigned to each. These new partitions are reinforced with concrete barricades and razor wire.

Renamed, relocated, and granted favored status, Thomas enjoys one success after another until, working as a devoted civil servant, he suddenly falls out of the system entirely.

Publishers Weekly

Thomson's latest dystopian novel (after The Book of Revelation) begins in brilliant, unsettling fashion when a young boy is taken by government decree from his parents during the initial stages of the Rearrangement, which occurs in a totalitarian, near-future England. In this brave new world, the country's entire population is forcibly reorganized and relocated into autonomous zones according to psychology, or the four humors: choleric, melancholic, phlegmatic and sanguine. Placed in an orphanage, renamed Thomas Parry and transferred to a new family in the Red Quarter (for sanguine types), he settles in with a father overwhelmed by the loss of his relocated wife and a promiscuous sister desperate for human connection. As an adult, Thomas takes a clandestine job with the government, but soon risks being charged with "undermining the state" when he begins a spur-of-the-moment voyage across borders in search, at first, of his real parents and his true self. Despite a cleverly imagined political system and the promise of sharp social criticism, this allegory limps to an ending that belies its inspired start. Agent, Amanda Urban. (June) Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.

About the Author, Rupert Thomson

The author of six previous novels—most recently, The Book of Revelation—Rupert Thomson was born in England and now lives with his wife and their daughter in Barcelona.

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly

Thomson's latest dystopian novel (after The Book of Revelation) begins in brilliant, unsettling fashion when a young boy is taken by government decree from his parents during the initial stages of the Rearrangement, which occurs in a totalitarian, near-future England. In this brave new world, the country's entire population is forcibly reorganized and relocated into autonomous zones according to psychology, or the four humors: choleric, melancholic, phlegmatic and sanguine. Placed in an orphanage, renamed Thomas Parry and transferred to a new family in the Red Quarter (for sanguine types), he settles in with a father overwhelmed by the loss of his relocated wife and a promiscuous sister desperate for human connection. As an adult, Thomas takes a clandestine job with the government, but soon risks being charged with "undermining the state" when he begins a spur-of-the-moment voyage across borders in search, at first, of his real parents and his true self. Despite a cleverly imagined political system and the promise of sharp social criticism, this allegory limps to an ending that belies its inspired start. Agent, Amanda Urban. (June) Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.

Library Journal

The most unsettling nightmares are those that feel as though they could really happen, and Thomson's novels (e.g., Book of Revelation) have been a study in these kinds of psychological nightmares. In his latest, the government splits the United Kingdom and its populace into four quarters that correspond with four distinct personality types or humors-Yellow for the aggressive, Blue for the melancholics, Green for the apathetic phlegmatics, and Red for the sanguine. A small child when he is severed from his parents and relocated to the easygoing Red quarter, Thomas Perry grows up with little memory of life before the reassignment and is easily indoctrinated into the new regime and its dogmas. As an adult, however, Thomas has a job that takes him across the zone borders, and he begins to question his fractured country. With the haunting quality of David Bowie's postapocalyptic Ziggy Stardust melodies, Thompson's novel draws favorable comparisons with other dystopian classics like Margaret Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale and George Orwell's 1984. His cautionary vision of the horrible controlling power of politics is an immensely riveting, highly recommended read for all public libraries.-Misha Stone, Seattle P.L. Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

A dystopian vision of social "rearrangement." This time out, the stylish British author (The Book of Revelation, 2000, etc.) depicts a future England "reorganized" to reverse the nation's descent into "envy, misery, and greed," a catastrophe that has made a formerly functional society "northern, inward-looking, barbaric." Matthew Mickelwright, Thomson's narrator, is forcibly removed from his home when he's eight years old, later relocated and renamed ("Thomas Parry"), as part of a government redistribution of its populace into one of four "Zones" or "Quarters" distinguished according to the ancient theory of the human body's ruling "humours": choleric, melancholic, phlegmatic and sanguine. Designated sanguine, Thomas is raised among children of similar temperament, reassigned to the family of a railroad engineer (whose wife was sent to a different Zone) and his teenaged daughter. Upon graduating from university, Thomas finds employment with "an organization whose job it was both to guide and to protect society," becomes a civil servant entrusted with "transferring" people from Zone to Zone-and, attending "conferences" that take him to all four Quarters, becomes painfully aware of public resistance to The Rearrangement and flaws in his government's exercise of societal control. Like Gulliver adrift in contrasting alien lands, Thomas encounters radicalized victims of "the new [psychological] racism," survives shipwreck and introduction to the idealistic "Church of Heaven on Earth," crosses borders illegally, is detained and "re-evaluated," lives briefly with the reviled White People (in whom no "humour" predominates), meets a "shape-shifting" girl employed as a "spirit guide" easing peopletoward death, and ends up energized by a hopeful vision of his own future-which the reader sees receding at the close. Thomson makes it work intermittently, but has stretched his material too thin, pushing clarity outside the reader's field of vision. A flawed effort, from a writer capable of much better work.

Book Details

Published
July 1, 2006
Publisher
Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group
Pages
352
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9781400076598

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