Quick News Bit

‘The body by the shore’ book review: With not too many surpises, Tabish Khair ties up all the strings neatly

0

Express News Service

Tabish Khair’s new book is a scientific thriller where the action mostly takes place on an oil rig-turned-dubious resort in the North Sea just off Denmark. Set in the future––around 2030––with frequent references to the coronavirus pandemic that hit the world a decade ago, the reader sees that the world has not changed drastically in the wake of Covid. The mess of politics, the dire state of economics, and manipulative games being played by those with political and economic clout, all seem to be the same old, same old.

There are dirty deeds being done in the dark on that rig by powerful people who have been getting away with it for some years. Now, there are a couple of Danish police officers, one retired and one serving, on the tail of these baddies. The retired cop, Jens Erik, is the one who got to sniff around the closed-without-resolution police case of an African man, whose body was found floating in the North Sea a few years ago. Being possessed of a powerful curiosity and an equally powerful determination to get to the root of things, Erik decides to dig deeper into the case, and of course, the proverbial can of worms spills open.

Elsewhere, there’s a killer, Harris Malouf, who believes that he has gone into complete retirement, tending to his garden and his security cohort of aggressive swans. But he is abruptly brought off that break and plunged into an assignment that leads him to the oil rig.

On the rig itself, some suspect “guests” arrive, do their mysterious work, and go, all observed by a beautiful Caribbean girl, Michelle Nancy. She came onto the rig following her suave lover Kurt, and all too quickly realised she is a prisoner there. Being anything but dumb, and as inquisitive as Erik, Michelle starts to look around the rig stealthily and comes across horrors in secret chambers.

Khair brings together all the characters in a series of face-offs while making the grand reveal. The twist in the tale is whether the killer is human or something else, a virus perhaps. Because the cabal of scientists connected to that body by the shore and to this tale were all involved in conducting experiments or writing up papers on just what symbiotic microbes can do inside the human body. Not too horrifying in academic treatises, but most horrifying when applied.

Khair switches from the action on the ground to tracing the scientists’ work and beliefs every few pages. This switch can be disconcerting at first, but as the story progresses, the reader comes to expect it as an aid to gaining more knowledge of what exactly underpins this sinister experiment.

The plot does get a bit dense at times, as you’d expect from a cerebral sci-fi thriller. The characters are all well-drawn, as are the observations on the post-pandemic world, racism, mention of a mosaic virus that would hit humanity soon, and climate activists; and though there aren’t too many surprises by the end, all the strings are tied up neatly.

For all the latest Life Style News Click Here 

 For the latest news and updates, follow us on Google News

Read original article here

Denial of responsibility! NewsBit.us is an automatic aggregator around the global media. All the content are available free on Internet. We have just arranged it in one platform for educational purpose only. In each content, the hyperlink to the primary source is specified. All trademarks belong to their rightful owners, all materials to their authors. If you are the owner of the content and do not want us to publish your materials on our website, please contact us by email – [email protected]. The content will be deleted within 24 hours.

Leave a comment