Paperback, 281 pages, W135mm x H215mm
A twenty-six-year-old Indian journalist decides to give up
his job and travel to a country where he can 'escape the deadness of his
life'. So he arrives in Guyana, a forgotten colonial society of raw,
mesmerising beauty.
From the beautiful, decaying wooden houses of
Georgetown, through coastal sugarcane plantations, to the dark
rainforest interior scavenged by diamond-hunters, he is absorbed by the
fantastic possibilities of this place where the descendants of the
enslaved and the indentured have made a new world.
But he is not just
seduced by the country: he is also captivated by the feisty yet fragile
Jan, and together they embark on an adventure which will take them into a
new country and change both their lives.
In his dazzling and ambitious
debut novel, Rahul Bhattacharya has created a story that follows the
shape and rhythms of life, not art. Part picaresque, in part a
meditation, "The Sly Company of People Who Care" captures the heady
adventures of travel, the overheated restlessness of youth, and the
paradoxes of searching for life's meaning in the escape from home.