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For fans of Andrew Nicoll's THE GOOD MAYOR, this is a delightfully wise and witty tale of a hoax perpetuated by a group of narcoleptic villagers -- led by their mayor, El Gordo -- to rescue their town from ruin, abandon their inhibitions and unite two lonely hearts. Part fable, part love story, part comi-tragedy, Poor Man's Wealth is narrated, somewhat unreliably, by El Gordo, the Fat One. He is the mayor of Higot, a dusty village in an unnamed Spanish-speaking country under military rule. He and the secret Marisol Committee, a group of local councillors, dream up a plan to save the village from economic death and the exodus of its young people, especially now that tobacco, their one source of income, is a suspect crop.they start a hoax.El Gordo, whose charming English comes via a library bequeathed to him, argues that the hoax which so changes the life of Higot is no more a deception than, say, the Loch Ness Monster, Ireland's Blarney Stone, the Colossus of Rhodes ... Can they pull it off, attract tourists to unattractive Higot? Will the hunchback Bartolomeo, a sex scandal involving a bicycle, or the military junta, blow the hoax apart and see its perpetrators 'disappeared'?El Gordo takes the reader on a joyous, witty and wise journey through the travails of his village ... and his heart.Product of an Australian mother and an American father, Rod Usher lives in Extremadura, Spain, with his Spanish wife, Angela Gutierrez. He grew up in Melbourne, where, after dropping out of law school, he began a career as a journalist. He has been literary editor of tHE AGE, chief sub-editor of tHE SUNDAY tIMES, London, and senior writer for the European edition of tIME MAGAZINE. His poetry is published in Australian literary magazines, including QUADRANt, ISLAND and MEANJIN. He plays flute, not very well, in the Guzman Ricis municipal band in the village of Barcarrota.A delightfully wise and witty tale of a hoax perpetrated by a group of villagers to rescue their community from ruin - in the process abandoning their inhibitions, and uniting two lonely hearts.
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If I enjoyed author Rod Ushers A Man of Marbles then I enjoyed this one just as much. This is an easy read that contains “a wise and witty tale” just as the cover blurb says.
Told in the first person by the mayor of a poor, dusty, small and obscure village called Higot that has little going for it in an unnamed Latin speaking country. El Gordo, the mayor, perpetrates a hoax to try and get the village heading towards a wealthier future. El Gordo is the benefactor of a 23,000 book library left to him by an upper class Englishman who lived in the village for 7 years with his butler. This led to friendship between them, with El Gordo learning English from what little he understood of the strange utterances of both the Englishman and via the books left to him.
This leads to a very wittily told tale that mixes, for example, English poetry and colloquialisms with some Spanish words that had me laughing out loud on several occasions, such was the clever wit. This was not meant to be making fun of a Spanish speaker attempting to speak English by the author. Of an Australian background with a Spanish wife and living in Spain, Rod Usher has I suspect noticed that English is not that easy to understand for those of another lingo.
Thematically there is a lot covered from depression, the power of the written word, a changing world, greed and love.
There is one other theme that would in fact give the plot away, and I am certainly not going to do that other than recommend this very good book to those that wish to know what poor man's wealth is.
I sprang to the stirrup, and Joris, and he;
I galloped, Dirck galloped, we galloped all three;
‘Good speed!'' cried the watch, as the gate-bolts undrew;
‘Speed!' echoed the wall to us galloping through;
Behind shut the postern, the lights sank to rest,
And into the midnight we galloped abreast.