What's the Name of That Book??? discussion

This topic is about
Leapfrog with unicorns
SOLVED: Adult Fiction
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SOLVED. Weird Tom Robbins-esque novel about Native Americans, pharmaceutical companies and Central American politics. [s]
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Mia
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May 10, 2013 08:46AM

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Ao Toa: Earth Warriors
The Seeds of Misrule by P G Morgan I couldn't find this one on Goodreads but here is a link where you can see the (totally weird) cover: https://sslbf.servers121.com/~paulmr0...
One of these is from New Zealand and the other is Australian by the way.


The book you're after sounds like a bad cross between the windup girl and the da vinci code... and so does this one.

Leapfrog With Unicorns looks to have the Corn and Corporations subjects and a heroine with plaited hair (http://www.trademe.co.nz/books/fictio...), but the title is not very long...

how did you do that?! i swear, i searched and searched last year and came up empty.
behold, the power of crowdsourcing.
thank you so much!



It was in the search results for subject corn on http://www.worldcat.org/advancedsearch and then I googled about it, but there's not much info around.

So it is with Peter Hawes, who has produced his fourth novel, (leaving aside his first, La Hoguera, as the reviewer – no habla español – must). When he produced his first novel in English, Tasman’s Lay, in 1995, Hawes was (as perhaps he still is) better known as a writer for screen and stage, a newspaper columnist, a children’s author, a dabbler in poetry and short fiction and, of course, a television funny man. This novel was received with bemusement. It was everything everyone expected it to be coming from Hawes – “witty”, “erudite”, “rollicking”, “picaresque” and “a highly inventive comic diversion” – but it was also disconcertingly more. For one thing, Hawes seemed to have put a lot of work into the research, even if it was only to know his futtocks from his strakes; and, for another, it had a bleak ending and spoke just a few too many true words in jest. There was a sense that the author had ambitions of a higher order than his reviewers were giving him credit for. Was this comedy marred by intrusive “issues”, or was this a serious book swamped by compulsive clowning?
Two further novels followed – Leapfrog with Unicorns (1996) and Playing Waterloo (1998); both were very funny, but both were also highly complex and had things to say, about global capitalism (Unicorns) and history (Waterloo). Like Tasman’s Lay, they were executed with the impressive assurance of a billowing imagination ballasted with painstaking research. Each was more exuberant and less satisfying than Tasman, suffering in both cases from excessive complexity and, stylistically, a mixture that was just a little too rich. Neither convinced his readership that Hawes deserved – or even wanted – to be taken seriously.
Books mentioned in this topic
Leapfrog with unicorns (other topics)A Cure to Die For (other topics)
Ao Toa: Earth Warriors (other topics)
Greenfinger (other topics)