A Glass Rope

Science Fiction & Fantasy, Science Fiction, Fiction & Literature, Literary
Cover of the book A Glass Rope by Ian Florance, OnlyConnect Publishing
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Ian Florance ISBN: 9780956757722
Publisher: OnlyConnect Publishing Publication: July 8, 2013
Imprint: OnlyConnect Publishing Language: English
Author: Ian Florance
ISBN: 9780956757722
Publisher: OnlyConnect Publishing
Publication: July 8, 2013
Imprint: OnlyConnect Publishing
Language: English
Adam Mahfouz is mugged and his life starts to fall apart.

He is a tutor on the Cull, a global educational programme aimed at reducing social inequality and ethnic tension in the globalised economy of the 2060s. He was brought up in a poor, ethnically mixed background and is proud of his status as a 'scholarship boy' and what he's achieved in his working life. His mugger is a former pupil, Leila, who gradually invades his life. Adam begins to record his past obsessively. He grows fascinated by memories of his teenage years when he was seduced by a group of rich, self-indulgent kids, including the charismatic, unstable Nathan. This period led to five deaths, including Nathan's, and the disappearance of Adam's sister.

He also records what's happening to him as he writes. He loses his home and job (and nearly his life), and he and Leila set out to walk through and under London to beg help from Nathan's now aged billionaire father. Together they explore a London divided by extremes of wealth and by ethnicity, culture and religion; which mixes 400 year old buildings and subterranean archaeological sites with futuristic technology. The journey ends in a Gravesend tomb where two more people die. In the same place, Adam remeets his sister after 30 years of separation. They live together in Kings Cross and, as Adam completes writing his memories and gets involved with an ambiguous gang of low-lifes, he finally discovers the truth about his life, his job and his past.

A Glass Rope is set in the near future in a slightly off- balance world but one which is recognisably our own. It reflects issues such as technological change, the poverty gap, ethnicity, surveillance, entrepreneurship and sexual identity.

It's also about London and the Thames - the 'glass rope' of the title - drawing on stories the author's father and grandfather told him about their lives in Bermondsey.
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Adam Mahfouz is mugged and his life starts to fall apart.

He is a tutor on the Cull, a global educational programme aimed at reducing social inequality and ethnic tension in the globalised economy of the 2060s. He was brought up in a poor, ethnically mixed background and is proud of his status as a 'scholarship boy' and what he's achieved in his working life. His mugger is a former pupil, Leila, who gradually invades his life. Adam begins to record his past obsessively. He grows fascinated by memories of his teenage years when he was seduced by a group of rich, self-indulgent kids, including the charismatic, unstable Nathan. This period led to five deaths, including Nathan's, and the disappearance of Adam's sister.

He also records what's happening to him as he writes. He loses his home and job (and nearly his life), and he and Leila set out to walk through and under London to beg help from Nathan's now aged billionaire father. Together they explore a London divided by extremes of wealth and by ethnicity, culture and religion; which mixes 400 year old buildings and subterranean archaeological sites with futuristic technology. The journey ends in a Gravesend tomb where two more people die. In the same place, Adam remeets his sister after 30 years of separation. They live together in Kings Cross and, as Adam completes writing his memories and gets involved with an ambiguous gang of low-lifes, he finally discovers the truth about his life, his job and his past.

A Glass Rope is set in the near future in a slightly off- balance world but one which is recognisably our own. It reflects issues such as technological change, the poverty gap, ethnicity, surveillance, entrepreneurship and sexual identity.

It's also about London and the Thames - the 'glass rope' of the title - drawing on stories the author's father and grandfather told him about their lives in Bermondsey.

More books from Literary

Cover of the book Léonie, un secret de famille by Ian Florance
Cover of the book Some Extremely Boring Drives by Ian Florance
Cover of the book Forty-one Thieves: A Tale of California by Ian Florance
Cover of the book Shakespeares Tragedies Reviewed by Ian Florance
Cover of the book Canti Orfici by Ian Florance
Cover of the book Vergleich zwischen 'Herr Lehmann' von Sven Regener und 'Aus dem Leben eines Taugenichts' von Joseph von Eichendorff by Ian Florance
Cover of the book The Pilgrim's Progress and Grace Abounding to the Chief of Sinners by Ian Florance
Cover of the book El ingenioso hidalgo D. Quijote de la mancha 2 by Ian Florance
Cover of the book Fictions of the War on Terror by Ian Florance
Cover of the book Le Feu by Ian Florance
Cover of the book Expedition into the Interior of Tropical Australia by Ian Florance
Cover of the book Ignorance by Ian Florance
Cover of the book The Holiday Friend by Ian Florance
Cover of the book Floating in My Mother's Palm by Ian Florance
Cover of the book N'Digo Legacy Black Luxe 110: Business and Legal Eagles Edition by Ian Florance
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy