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Cleaning House
 Barry Kalb

Soft Cover:
ISBN: 962-8783-32-7
Dimensions: 488 pp, 200 x 140 mm
Price: HK$150/US$18

Hard Cover:
ISBN: 962-8783-36-X
Dimensions: 488 pp, 210 x 145 mm
Price: HK$195/US$23

 

As the new millennium begins, the world is a sorry sight. Wars are erupting, totalitarianism is on the rise, AIDS is spreading like a wildfire, poverty is increasing, terrorist networks abound and people, in their billions, are threatening existence itself. Yet George Ringo, the accidentally elected new Pope from Lower Fasso, is not only inept, but also too inexperienced with the Byzantine world of Vatican politics to introduce radical solutions.

So whom does God turn to for help? Noah Archer, a data analyst and computer buff from California. Unfortunately, Noah comes with baggage and proves less than ideal for the job. Archangel Wong, and Women Against Men, a radical lesbian group left over from the ‘60s, bedevil the plot.

Satirical and intelligent, Barry Kalb’s debut novel Cleaning House is a hilarious look at the times in which we live and a disturbing re-statement of the old adage that power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely.

Barry Kalb is a former CBS correspondent in Asia who joined Time Magazine in Eastern Europe at the time of the Solidarity movement in Poland. He then transferred to Rome, where he covered Italian terrorism and politics and the attempted assassination of the Pope. He has made Hong Kong his home since 1985.

Critics Comments

Barry Kalb, originally a journalist who has worked for CBS and Time and later owner of Marco Polo Pizza, has written a cynical debut novel about the cataclysmic state of the world. It’s a good thing that the main character of Cleaning House, computer whiz Noah Archer hasn’t heard of SARS or the Iraq war, because AlDS, terrorism and radical lesbian groups are already enough to make him want to seriously cut down on the world population. But even with a message from God and help from Archangel Wong, Noah finds himself spinning out of control as he finds more and more that he wants to destroy Part Jonathan Swift, part Biblical allegory, part modern-day commentary this twisted and sometimes offensive satire is a refreshing entry among Hong Kong’s usual politically correct literary offerings.

Joyce Hor-Chung Lou, HK Magazine

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Copyright © Barry Kalb

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