As different from Karin as chalk from cheese, Giles’ divorced wife Lady Virginia Fenwick provides tons of merry moments for the reader. Facing bankruptcy, and slave to the demands of her expensive tastes, Virginia decides to snag a rich husband, and when that fails she fakes a pregnancy in order to milk a gullible tycoon for hefty child support payments! Although Archer takes a few digs at the peerage by means of his portrayal of Virginia, his private admiration for it is evinced by the fact that he loses no time in ensuring that the dispirited and discredited Giles becomes a member of the House of Lords.
Archer’s considerable experience as a novelist is evident from the way in which he manages to mix romance, espionage, comedy, politics, and occasionally violence with apparent ease. Since the novel is set in the 1970s, he also dwells on older, xenophobic aspects of English culture by having his villains entrap the financier Hakim Bishara. Bishara lands in court due to a trumped up drug-related charge, and it is up to the redoubtable detective Barry Hammond to procure enough evidence to get him released. At times, the atmosphere of the novel comes close to emulating that of a soap opera, but rather than grating on a reader’s nerves this just adds to its charm.
Perhaps the main flaw of Archer’s craft lies in the improbable nature of some of his protagonists’ actions — it is highly unlikely that eminently successful bankers and politicians would, without exception, make colossal fools of themselves over women. The maxim ‘one’s heart rules one’s head’ holds true for many of the male characters in the novel, regardless of age, race, or temperament. Nevertheless, their romantic shenanigans are as enjoyable as some of the highly emotional and/or interesting speeches and letters that intersperse the text — most notably Harry’s mother’s farewell note to her family which is read after her death, the will of Virginia’s father, and a moving speech delivered by one of the characters in Sweden at the Nobel Prize Awards Ceremony. While it isn’t strictly necessary to read the previous Clifton Chronicles books in order to appreciate the general overarching plot of Archer’s saga, they make for satisfying summer reading if one has the time, leisure, and inclination to do so. Obviously die-hard fans of Archer’s work will barely be able to contain themselves until November 2016 when the penultimate instalment of this series, This Was a Man, is published, enabling them to bid a bittersweet farewell to some of his best-known dramatis personae.
The reviewer is assistant professor of social sciences and liberal arts at the Institute of Business Administration, Karachi.
Cometh the Hour
(THRILLER)
By Jeffrey Archer
St. Martin’s Press, UK
ISBN: 978-1250061621
400pp.
Published in Dawn, Books & Authors, August 7th, 2016