Skip to content
Scan a barcode
Scan
Paperback Thine Is the Kingdom Book

ISBN: 097919217X

ISBN13: 9780979192173

Thine Is the Kingdom

This novel of adventure and conflict explores the nature of class and identity in the post-colonial world of the Bahamas. The narrative, rich in imagery, reveals the inner lives of the characters and... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Recommended

Format: Paperback

Temporarily Unavailable

9 people are interested in this title.

We receive fewer than 1 copy every 6 months.

Related Subjects

Fiction Literature & Fiction

Customer Reviews

3 ratings

A best seller in the Bahamas

"Thine is the Kingdom" is that rare novel that combines a great story with questions about what it means to be human. Set in the Bahamas - a back drop that both lives up to that island county's postcard image and shatters it at the same time - the novel follows the homecoming of the narrator Gavin Blake, born on the island but denied citizenship because his father was foreign, who has returned to sort his papers out. Blake goes through a series of adventures and misadventures with his boss, the colorful Jacob Thesinger, a questionable and larger than life individual who's world is under siege by the elements and by lawlessness. As the threats, break-ins and hold ups mount Thesinger's actions become more extreme and questionable and put Blake, on the island illegally, in a compromised position. Eventually he needs to get his papers sorted out or face the possibility of being deported from the country of his birth. But he finds the bureaucracy unresponsive and is finally forced to choose between his sense of morals and having to pay a bribe for his papers. I won't give away the ending - except to say someone is killed. This is a book that raises a lot a questions about identity and society. When it came out in the Bahamas the publisher's ad asked "Is it ever right to do something illegal to become legal?". The novel hit a nerve and sold out nationwide in 9 days. Now its been published in the United States, giving everyone a chance to read it.

An adventure on a Caribbean island where old money tries to survive amidst the poor also trying to s

Gavin Blake is a university graduate that has spent a few years playing the role of a transient student, backpacking around the world. In order to establish some roots, he has returned to the Caribbean island where he was born. His father was an American and his mother was native to the island, so according to the law on the island, he is not a citizen. Law is a relative term on the island, basically relative to how much money you can pay to have the law enforced. Since he is on the island illegally, Gavin has few options so he takes a job working for Jacob Thesinger, a wealthy man whose family made their fortune bootlegging during prohibition. Thesinger is a man watching his world come apart as the island is descending into lawlessness, police stations are being closed, the government is growing more corrupt and the electric power fails on a regular basis. While Gavin is a loyal employee, that trait is severely tested when Thesinger engages in some dangerous actions and prepares to sell his yacht and depart the island. In what is no doubt a last hurrah, Thesinger throws a party for his fellow wealthy islanders and it degenerates into a drunken morass. The local security guards hired for the event aid in theft, largely disappear and while Gavin tries to stop it, he is generally powerless. Fortunately, through bribery, Gavin is able to obtain his citizenship and a passport. The story closes with Gavin now realizing that the passport gives him his freedom. There are several themes in this novel, the stateless, aimless person trying to establish roots, the wealthy class under siege by creeping lawlessness and the increasingly desperate poor, the hunting of seafood to the point of local extinction, a sense of powerlessness against the tide of social change and the myth of the idyllic existence on a tropical island. The story moves well, although there is no definitive resolution of the conflicts. In my opinion, this is the way it should have ended, as these problems are so complex that any resolution would have appeared artificial.

More than Palm Trees are swaying in little Nassau...

Buckner's "Thine is The Kingdon" is a one day read for you will not be able to put it down! Island Life, the true reality of life in The Bahamas in the post colonial period of modern day. Old values and new ones slash with palm trees swaying and the smell of sea air waughs around the characters Buckner has created in detail. Life is not all which one imagines in these Islands off The Florida Coast...A must read for anyone whom has lived "Island Life".
Copyright © 2024 Thriftbooks.com Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Do Not Sell/Share My Personal Information | Cookie Policy | Cookie Preferences | Accessibility Statement
ThriftBooks® and the ThriftBooks® logo are registered trademarks of Thrift Books Global, LLC
GoDaddy Verified and Secured