Alex Ramon Mas Ramon Mas من عند چک 51 گ ب خوش پور، باكستان
fun book.....
The Ballad of the Whiskey Robber is a strong contender thus far for my year-end "Best Of" list. The story of Attila Ambrus, a Transylvanian emigre who arrives in Hungary fleeing the persecutions of Ceausescu's Romania just as the former Warsaw Pact countries are beginning to move toward uber-capitalist economies, this is also the story of these Eastern European countries and their haphazard rush to embrace all things American. Attila struggles to find any means of employment while living in a converted horse paddock while also serving as the 3rd string goalie for Budapest's premier hockey team, UTE, not because of any particular skill at hockey (anytime Attila is played the UTE team invariably ends up losing by double digits) but merely because of his dedication to the idea of being a good hockey player. After his illicit pelt smuggling operation is ended by increased border security between Hungary and Romania, Attila turns to robbery as a means to fund his lifestyle becoming a people's folk hero in the vein of Robin Hood, Ned Kelly, and the 19th Century Hungarian robber, Sandor Pintza. The book is hilarious as it outlines Attila's meticulous planning for each robbery, the attempts by the under-funded and comical police to apprehend him (the lead detective learned all of his investigative techniques from watching dubbed episodes of Columbo), and the overall picture it paints of corruption and poverty in the transitioning country. The reader's affection for Attila grows, even as his form crumbles and he stumbles ever close to capture, as Rubinstein explains some of the larger political context occurring in Hungary at the same time, closing the book by outlining that the sum of Attila's total robberies never even broke $1 million (US), for which he received 17 years in a maximum security prison, while the autocrats and mafiosos that systematically crippled and bankrupted his country, when they were ever charged at all, walked away scot-free. It makes one glad to live in a country where such double-standards don't apply- until you realize that they, in fact, do. War profiteers, Enron execs, the Bush administration- no one will hang for their crimes, while our prisons continue to be filled with victims of class oppression and mindless drug wars. We are not so different from the Third world country that this story is set in.
Re-read (actually listened to) for April Book Club. Much creepier on audio.