• Complain

Boris Johnson - Seventy-Two Virgins

Here you can read online Boris Johnson - Seventy-Two Virgins full text of the book (entire story) in english for free. Download pdf and epub, get meaning, cover and reviews about this ebook. City: London, year: 2004, publisher: HarperCollins, genre: Humor. Description of the work, (preface) as well as reviews are available. Best literature library LitArk.com created for fans of good reading and offers a wide selection of genres:

Romance novel Science fiction Adventure Detective Science History Home and family Prose Art Politics Computer Non-fiction Religion Business Children Humor

Choose a favorite category and find really read worthwhile books. Enjoy immersion in the world of imagination, feel the emotions of the characters or learn something new for yourself, make an fascinating discovery.

Boris Johnson Seventy-Two Virgins
  • Book:
    Seventy-Two Virgins
  • Author:
  • Publisher:
    HarperCollins
  • Genre:
  • Year:
    2004
  • City:
    London
  • ISBN:
    978-0007195909
  • Rating:
    5 / 5
  • Favourites:
    Add to favourites
  • Your mark:
    • 100
    • 1
    • 2
    • 3
    • 4
    • 5

Seventy-Two Virgins: summary, description and annotation

We offer to read an annotation, description, summary or preface (depends on what the author of the book "Seventy-Two Virgins" wrote himself). If you haven't found the necessary information about the book — write in the comments, we will try to find it.

Review About the Author A hectic comedy thriller a rip-roaring knockabout farce refreshingly unpompous, faintly dishevelled and often very funny. Mail on Sunday At the centre of his first novel, a light comedy, is a terrorist plot of frightening ingenuity the comedy is reminiscent of Tom Sharpe. Sunday Times Johnson scores in his comic handling of those most sensitive issues he succeeds in being charming and sincere Boris Johnson has written a witty page-turner. Observer Among the hilarious scenes of events and the wonderful dialogue which keeps the story moving at a cracking pace, Johnson uncovers some home truths I can give no higher praise to this book than to say that I lapped it up at a single uproarious sitting. Irish Examiner As an author, the Shadow Arts Minister is in a class of his own: ebullient, exhausting but irresistible. Daily Mail fluent, funny material the writing is vintage, Wodehousian Boris it has been assembled with skill and terrific energy and will lift morale in the soul of many. Evening Standard This is a comic novel, but Johnson is never far away from making serious points, which he leads us towards with admirable stealth. Daily Telegraph a splendidly accomplished and gripping first novel Few authors could get away with it, but this one most certainly does. Highly recommended. Sunday Telegraph The rollicking pace and continuous outpouring of comic invention make the book The guardians of our authors future need not worry. This is a laurel from a new bush, but certainly a prizewinner. Spectator invents a genre all of his own: a post 9/11 farce a pacy, knockabout political thriller which takes in would-be terrorists careering through Westminster in a stolen ambulance, a visit from the US president, celebrity chefs, snipers, tabloids chasing extra-curricular as much fun reading it as Johnson had writing it. GQ As well as Mr Johnsons inside knowledge of Parliament and his exuberantly idiosyncratic prose style, Mr Johnson is also brilliant at characterisationeach one of his cast of hundreds leaps to life in a few sentences and yes, I laughed out loud approximately every 30 minutes. Country Life Boris Johnson is the editor of the , MP for Henley, writes a column for the and has just been appointed Shadow Arts Minister. He lives in London and Oxfordshire with his wife and their children.

Boris Johnson: author's other books


Who wrote Seventy-Two Virgins? Find out the surname, the name of the author of the book and a list of all author's works by series.

Seventy-Two Virgins — read online for free the complete book (whole text) full work

Below is the text of the book, divided by pages. System saving the place of the last page read, allows you to conveniently read the book "Seventy-Two Virgins" online for free, without having to search again every time where you left off. Put a bookmark, and you can go to the page where you finished reading at any time.

Light

Font size:

Reset

Interval:

Bookmark:

Make

Boris Johnson

SEVENTY-TWO VIRGINS

A Comedy of Errors

Optimis parentibus

Part One

THE TROJAN AMBULANCE

CHAPTER ONE

0752 HRS

On what he had every reason to believe would be the last day of his undistinguished political career Roger Barlow awoke in a state of sexual excitement and with a gun to his head, the one fading as he became aware of the other.

The gun was equipped with an orange whale harpoon, and would have been lethal, had it been more than six inches long and made of something other than plastic.

Say your prayers, buddy, said the four-year-old. Rogers eyelid quivered.

If Sigmund Freud had been able to catch this kids conversation, he would have been thrilled. Seldom had there been so exuberant and uninhibited an Oedipus complex.

One morning they were lying all three of them in bed, and Roger was trying to persuade the kid to go and watch Scooby Doo. The child turned to his mother.

He spoke prettily, in the kind of voice he might use for ordering another fish finger.

I am going to kill Daddy, and then I am going to marry you. Today, Roger didnt want to be rude to the four-year-old, and he didnt want to exacerbate his complex, but he was damned if he was going to be treated in this way. He grunted, and rolled away, gripping his slumbering wife with both arms.

The four-year-old fired the plastic dart carefully into the back of Rogers neck.

Barlows blow went wide. Ceding his place to his rival, he rose. He tended to wear T-shirts in bed, and this one was a relic of a brief but illustrious former Tory leadership under which he had been proud to serve.

Its Time For Hague, proclaimed the T-shirt, while the back announced: The Common Sense Revolution. As a piece of nightwear, his wife claimed that it had anti-aphrodisiacal properties of a barely credible order.

MMM, said his wife.

Mmm, said Roger. Back in a mo.

As he went into the bathroom he heard the flap of the letterbox. Cee-rist! he thought, the papers!

He scooted downstairs and scooped them up off the mat. Quickly he went through the brutal tabloid that was most likely to have done him in, and then the ones that pretended to be more responsible.

Nope.

Nothing.

Nope. Nothing.

Phew.

Just the usual flammed-up load of old cobblers, masquerading as news.

There was allegedly a dirty bomb threat to London, or so said sources in the Home Office, with an eye, no doubt, to stirring up public alarm, and then introducing some fresh repression of liberty. There were acres of predictable drivel about the security arrangements for the celebrations today.

The police had launched some Al-Qaeda raid in Wolverhampton and Finsbury. But then there was one of those every month.

In other words, there was nothing important, and certainly nothing to feed his ludicrous paranoia. But some guilty instinct told him to purge the house of these bullying quires of paper.

So he stretched down the Common Sense Revolution to make it a kind of nightshirt (common sense, innit?) and zipped outside into the summer morning. He stuffed them into the fox-ravaged bin, and then checked that no one had seen him.

Drat. Someone had indeed seen him. It was that funny woman who was always muttering under her breath, and who had once seen him administering physical chastisement in fact it was about the only occasion he had ever done so to one of his other children.

He beamed at her, tugging the T-shirt over his hips.

With a shudder his neighbour hurried about her business, and Roger darted back up the steps to see the door shutting in his face.

Oi. You. No! he said.

He bent down to look through the flap.

Please, he said.

The childs sweet face came closer. He was now dressed in a red crusaders tabard, and brandished a plastic gladius or stabbing sword.

You are not necessary, he said to Roger through the letterbox. Mummy, he called, looking back over his shoulder, do we know this man?

Five minutes later, and with the help of his wife, Roger Barlow had regained access to his house, dressed, washed, and was thrashing around the kitchen looking for that that thing.

You know, he said to his wife, the thing with the thing in it.

His wife had been around long enough to know what to do in these circumstances. She got on with drinking her coffee. Ah yes, she said, that thing.

Barlow cast a worried glance at his watch. It was that green folder thing, the one all about poor Mrs Betts. They were threatening to close the respite centre she needed for her son, who had such severe learning difficulties that he had no realistic hope of education. And last night, in a fit of alcohol-induced elation, he had been staring at the autistic Betts kids drawings, which were pretty good, and thought he had seen the answer. But he had had had HAD to have the file.

He was going to ring Mrs Betts that afternoon, and it was no use if he

Maybe Cameron still had it. He looked again at his watch and wondered whether to dial his beautiful, omnicompetent American researcher. It was too early.

He searched again in his office, under the bed, under the sofa, under the doormat, in the stuff being put out for recycling. He had a sudden horror that he had accidentally thrown the folder away with the papers, and went back to the bins. And then he saw something under his sons chair, where the child was eating his second breakfast.

He had no time to ask how it had got there. He had no time to speculate on the industrial-strength adhesive with which it was now covered, and which is created by mixing Weetabix with milk.

He had no time because he had a speech to prepare, a respite centre to save, and he had to get to the Commons before the whole of Westminster was blockaded by the Americans.

The President was due to start speaking at 10 a.m., and Roger had to be in his seat in less than an hour. He pointed the bike south and started to churn his legs.

As for the Presidents breakfast, it differed from Rogers in almost every respect. It was a leisured and ruminative repast, taken at a round table in a vast bay window in the same vaulted apartments that have been given to every visiting head of state for the last fifty years.

Olaf of Norway had slept there. So had King Baudouin of Belgium. So had the Pope, and come to that, President Marcos of the Philippines and sundry other thugs the Foreign Office had once thought fit to foist on Her Majesty, notably President Ceaucescu of Romania in 1978 and President Mugabe of Zimbabwe in 1994.

On the bedside table was a guide to the British Museum, a volume of Tennyson and a Dick Francis hardback that might have been new in 1973, when the room was used by President Mobutu Sese Seko of Zaire.

Now the President looked out over Windsor Great Park, at the ancient oaks, trussed and propped with iron, and the deer, and, in the distance, the looming turrets of Legoland; but what fascinated him most was the yellow packet of breakfast cereal, reposing in a specially constructed silver cruet.

Say, honey, look at this, he said to the First Lady, and read out the awesome royal warrants. By appointment to Her Majesty the Queen, Weetabix and Co., purveyors of breakfast cereals. And Prince Charles. And the Queen Mum. I thought she passed away.

Gee, said the First Lady, who had also been trying to eat the Weetabix. Does that mean they make this stuff specially for the Queen?

I guess she has to sort of approve it.

How much does she have to eat? asked the First Lady.

They both stared at their bowls. I dunno, said the President. Kind of soaks up the milk, doesnt it?

Like Barlow, the President considered the amazing physical properties of a Weetabix/milk solution, and its possible application in the construction industry. The First Lady fleetingly wondered what it would be like to have the Presidential seal on the back of a packet of Froot Loops.

Next page
Light

Font size:

Reset

Interval:

Bookmark:

Make

Similar books «Seventy-Two Virgins»

Look at similar books to Seventy-Two Virgins. We have selected literature similar in name and meaning in the hope of providing readers with more options to find new, interesting, not yet read works.


Reviews about «Seventy-Two Virgins»

Discussion, reviews of the book Seventy-Two Virgins and just readers' own opinions. Leave your comments, write what you think about the work, its meaning or the main characters. Specify what exactly you liked and what you didn't like, and why you think so.