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The Buddha of Brewer Street

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Backbench MP Tom Goodfellowe is caught up in the search for the new Dalai Lama in this highly original and compelling thriller from the author of GOODFELLOWE MP and HOUSE OF CARDS – now reissued in new cover style. Tom Goodfellowe is the unlikeliest of political heroes. An MP whose career has already been consigned to the scrapheap of history, with a private life that staggers between confusion and chaos... And it's all about to get worse. A new Dalai Lama is born. The infant god-king of Tibet. And around the child explodes an international conspiracy that will carve a trail of death from the slopes of Mount Everest right to the heart of London's Chinatown. Goodfellowe becomes drawn into a murderous race against time and against sinister sources within his own government. On the outcome will hang the fate of one of the world's great religions – and Goodfellowe's turbulent personal life. Because someone, someone very close, is betraying him at every turn.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      December 1, 1997
      For fans of the Machiavellian Prime Minister Francis Urquhart, the antiheroic protagonist of Dobbs's previous trilogy (adapted for TV as House of Cards, starring Ian Richardson), Thomas Goodfellowe, a decent, down-on-his-political-luck backbencher, is an unenticing replacement. Likewise, few readers will be tempted by the second installment's ludicrous intrigue involving the Chinese government's attempts to find and kidnap the newly reincarnated, British-born Dalai Lama. A former political adviser to Margaret Thatcher and John Major, Dobbs seems to have gone soft since New Labour took power, if Goodfellowe's soap-operatic midlife crisis is an indicator. With his wife hospitalized for depression, his teenage daughter hiding family planning and pregnancy leaflets and his junior ministerial career over, Goodfellowe is totally unprepared to be enlisted by Buddhist monks in the search for the next Dalai Lama. Dobbs delivers plenty of international cat-and-mouse episodes, stretching from London's Chinatown to Tibet, along with scenes of Chinese human rights abuses that would alarm Amnesty International, but none of this adds up to much of a read. Although there are good guys to cheer for and baddies to boo in the race to find the special child in England's Tibetan refugee community, this featherweight entertainment has no punch.

    • Booklist

      December 1, 1998
      A wickedly popular political novelist in Britain, Dobbs' claim on American fame rests on PBS' "Masterpiece Theater" dramas ("House of Games," for example) based on Dobbs' memorably Machiavellian prime minister, Francis Urquhart. Dobbs has since created a political character sliding down the greasy pole, rather than climbing up it: Thomas Goodfellowe, lately the foreign minister but presently a lowly backbencher. Though in obscurity, Goodfellowe stumbles upon intrigue, personified by an emissary of the late Dalai Lama. The emissary's problem is of prime political significance: to find a child, the successor to the Dalai Lama, before the Chinese do. Calling in chits from fellow MPs, Goodfellowe's help becomes compromised--but by whom? The leaks enable the Chinese to kidnap the child, but our doughty Goodfellowe barges up to his old friend the Chinese ambassador, from whom he extracts, via blackmail and cajolery, the crucial information about the future god-king of Tibet. Well-modulated pacing, arch dialogue, and expectations of further Goodfellowe adventures (with women and with pols) ensure interest in this entertaining tale. ((Reviewed December 1, 1998))(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 1998, American Library Association.)

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