Revolt of the Sergeants

Fiction & Literature, Humorous
Cover of the book Revolt of the Sergeants by Philip Garlington, Philip Garlington
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Philip Garlington ISBN: 9781452413419
Publisher: Philip Garlington Publication: April 21, 2011
Imprint: Smashwords Edition Language: English
Author: Philip Garlington
ISBN: 9781452413419
Publisher: Philip Garlington
Publication: April 21, 2011
Imprint: Smashwords Edition
Language: English

From the Editor's Preface: Revolt of the Sergeants: An American Insurgency in Sudan,” as the blowzy title may suggest, is a roman a clef based on an amateurish and ill-fated paramilitary scheme carried out in the impoverished Darfur region of Sudan in the spring of (date deleted). In a word, five retired US Army soldiers, animated by quixotic fantasy and in my view by some sort of overt pathology, entered southwestern Sudan in stolen aircraft and routed the ragtag government garrison from the provincial capital of Rembec. Sharking up a militia, they became for a few months the de facto government of the province, repelling government counterattacks and briefly curbing some of the endemic banditry. Inevitably and quickly, their unsupported insurrection collapsed and the province returned to its usual anarchy
Apparently these balding ex-rankers were not soldiers of fortune. There is no fortune in Darfur, which then and now is an arid, isolated, disease-ridden, economically prostrate running sore of misery. The superannuated quintet had not been hired, nor did they expect to find compensation for their risky enterprise. The Americans financed their low-budget rebellion solely through the sale of captured weapons. Consistently describing themselves (satirically, one hopes) as “students,” they claimed they were merely undertaking “an experiment” that looked into methods for stabilizing anarchistic societies. The charismatic leader (the “McDonald” of the book), alleges the sole motive for annexing a remote and forbidding African basket case, at gunpoint and at great trouble, was to test “management ideas” discussed earlier at a book club meeting at Fort Benning, Georgia. One’s eyebrow must rise. At the same time, no other motive is apparent.
According to this account, the sergeants briefly achieved a measure of security in lawless Darfur, and altruistically provided some basic services. But if by their own lights they were not self-interested mercenaries, neither were they missionaries. Their methods as described here were Draconian and sadistic.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

From the Editor's Preface: Revolt of the Sergeants: An American Insurgency in Sudan,” as the blowzy title may suggest, is a roman a clef based on an amateurish and ill-fated paramilitary scheme carried out in the impoverished Darfur region of Sudan in the spring of (date deleted). In a word, five retired US Army soldiers, animated by quixotic fantasy and in my view by some sort of overt pathology, entered southwestern Sudan in stolen aircraft and routed the ragtag government garrison from the provincial capital of Rembec. Sharking up a militia, they became for a few months the de facto government of the province, repelling government counterattacks and briefly curbing some of the endemic banditry. Inevitably and quickly, their unsupported insurrection collapsed and the province returned to its usual anarchy
Apparently these balding ex-rankers were not soldiers of fortune. There is no fortune in Darfur, which then and now is an arid, isolated, disease-ridden, economically prostrate running sore of misery. The superannuated quintet had not been hired, nor did they expect to find compensation for their risky enterprise. The Americans financed their low-budget rebellion solely through the sale of captured weapons. Consistently describing themselves (satirically, one hopes) as “students,” they claimed they were merely undertaking “an experiment” that looked into methods for stabilizing anarchistic societies. The charismatic leader (the “McDonald” of the book), alleges the sole motive for annexing a remote and forbidding African basket case, at gunpoint and at great trouble, was to test “management ideas” discussed earlier at a book club meeting at Fort Benning, Georgia. One’s eyebrow must rise. At the same time, no other motive is apparent.
According to this account, the sergeants briefly achieved a measure of security in lawless Darfur, and altruistically provided some basic services. But if by their own lights they were not self-interested mercenaries, neither were they missionaries. Their methods as described here were Draconian and sadistic.

More books from Humorous

Cover of the book First And Life by Philip Garlington
Cover of the book Un innocente gioco by Philip Garlington
Cover of the book Cross Country by Philip Garlington
Cover of the book Peaches Monroe 3: Starfire by Philip Garlington
Cover of the book Lea küsst wie keine andere by Philip Garlington
Cover of the book The Grin of the Doll Who Ate his Mother's Face in the Dark and Other Dreadful Tales by Philip Garlington
Cover of the book What the Space-Time Continuum Did Next by Philip Garlington
Cover of the book Parodieën (Illustrations) by Philip Garlington
Cover of the book Singles vs. Bridezillas by Philip Garlington
Cover of the book French Tart by Philip Garlington
Cover of the book Never Kiss a Man in a Christmas Sweater by Philip Garlington
Cover of the book Love in the Time of Climate Change by Philip Garlington
Cover of the book Mopswinter by Philip Garlington
Cover of the book Trickle Down by Philip Garlington
Cover of the book BUZZ VILLE: A Buffoon’s Paradise by Philip Garlington
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