book cover of Under A Hammock Moon
 

Under A Hammock Moon

(2012)
A novel by

 
 
Nearly fifty years ago Herman Wouk wrote an hilarious novel about a Caribbean island, Don’t Stop the Carnival, that has become a West Indian classic.
Now Graham Lord, the author of eight previous novels, who lives on the Caribbean island of Nevis, has written another, in which David Barron, a hapless British tax inspector, is sent incognito to the tiny West Indian paradise island of Innocent to investigate rich British tax dodgers.
But he is soon seduced by the island’s glorious scenery and weather, its idyllic rhythm, laidback lifestyle, gentle people, and a beautiful local girl, Shermelle, who captures his heart but disappears without trace or explanation.
The result is a funny, gripping story of love, lust, adventure and mystery in the tropical sun, peopled by a cast of memorable characters: the alarmingly mountainous black housekeeper, Miz Quaintance; the weirdly Shakespearean gardener, Grandad; the corrupt Deputy Prime Minister, Chezroy Billington; the wisecracking Australian beach bar owner, Boozy Suzy; a couple of sinister Slavs; and the foul-mouthed parrot, Mother Teresa.
Under a Hammock Moon is a hugely enjoyable, highly readable novel where nothing is quite what it seems and rich with the warmth, humour, colours, sounds, smells and joie-de-vivre of the West Indies. It has all the potential to become another Caribbean classic.


Genre: Thriller

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