Iqball Hotel

Fiction & Literature, Classics
Cover of the book Iqball Hotel by Boris Kolar, Založba Obzorja d.d.
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Boris Kolar ISBN: 9789612304102
Publisher: Založba Obzorja d.d. Publication: January 20, 2013
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Boris Kolar
ISBN: 9789612304102
Publisher: Založba Obzorja d.d.
Publication: January 20, 2013
Imprint:
Language: English

About the book and the author

The story of the Iqball hotel is set in the time immediately after World War I. The laid-back Vito, bustling with Mediterranean cheerfulness, fulfils his life's wish when he sets up a hotel in the middle of the savannah, even though the hotel is only a mud cabin. The Maasaian Harusha are the only guests bringing laughter and plenty of not too sensitive fun to the hotel.  The corpulent local woman named Alice rides fatefully into Vito’s life, "sitting upright on her bike, trying to keep her dignity and her parasol high." Opposing the genuine joy in the savannah is the missionary teacher Brandon O’Donnell, who embodies the colonial worldview of the time, filled with prejudice against everything African, especially female and African. The former German soldier Hans Myhen, storyteller and griot, joins the story as a reminder of the war horrors that have so deeply shaken the twentieth-century. Hans Myhen's stories join the time and space surrounding the main characters with the unseen background of the action, ruled by African magic and her servant, the omnipresent wind. 

Boris Kolar (1960) is a Slovene biologist, ecologist and farmer, an occasional environmental activist and the initiator of the Movement against the Pollution of the Free and Active Work Time. Iqball Hotel is his first novel. It was written over ten years, sensually over coffee or a glass of wine.  A multi-layered literary work, set in the reflection of the twentieth-century, is an ode to the joy of life, interlaced with a sharp criticism of war. According to literary critics, the Iqball hotel is one of the most unexpected, with humorous writing gifted surprises on Slovene bookshelves. The novel was nominated for the Kresnik Award for best novel of the year in 2009.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

About the book and the author

The story of the Iqball hotel is set in the time immediately after World War I. The laid-back Vito, bustling with Mediterranean cheerfulness, fulfils his life's wish when he sets up a hotel in the middle of the savannah, even though the hotel is only a mud cabin. The Maasaian Harusha are the only guests bringing laughter and plenty of not too sensitive fun to the hotel.  The corpulent local woman named Alice rides fatefully into Vito’s life, "sitting upright on her bike, trying to keep her dignity and her parasol high." Opposing the genuine joy in the savannah is the missionary teacher Brandon O’Donnell, who embodies the colonial worldview of the time, filled with prejudice against everything African, especially female and African. The former German soldier Hans Myhen, storyteller and griot, joins the story as a reminder of the war horrors that have so deeply shaken the twentieth-century. Hans Myhen's stories join the time and space surrounding the main characters with the unseen background of the action, ruled by African magic and her servant, the omnipresent wind. 

Boris Kolar (1960) is a Slovene biologist, ecologist and farmer, an occasional environmental activist and the initiator of the Movement against the Pollution of the Free and Active Work Time. Iqball Hotel is his first novel. It was written over ten years, sensually over coffee or a glass of wine.  A multi-layered literary work, set in the reflection of the twentieth-century, is an ode to the joy of life, interlaced with a sharp criticism of war. According to literary critics, the Iqball hotel is one of the most unexpected, with humorous writing gifted surprises on Slovene bookshelves. The novel was nominated for the Kresnik Award for best novel of the year in 2009.

More books from Classics

Cover of the book Just So Stories (Collins Classics) by Boris Kolar
Cover of the book The Satyricon by Boris Kolar
Cover of the book Man Without a Shadow by Boris Kolar
Cover of the book Round the Red Lamp by Boris Kolar
Cover of the book Elizabeth Gaskell: The Complete Novels (Golden Deer Classics) by Boris Kolar
Cover of the book L'Etui de nacre by Boris Kolar
Cover of the book Nursery Classics by Boris Kolar
Cover of the book The Hero of Manila by Boris Kolar
Cover of the book The Story of Sugar by Boris Kolar
Cover of the book Cómo se hace una novela by Boris Kolar
Cover of the book Le Libéralisme chrétien - Alexandre Vinet by Boris Kolar
Cover of the book La Divine Comédie (Golden Deer Classics) by Boris Kolar
Cover of the book The Snows of Kilimanjaro and Other Stories by Boris Kolar
Cover of the book Jean qui grogne et Jean qui rit by Boris Kolar
Cover of the book Herman Melville: Typee, Omoo, Mardi (LOA #1) by Boris Kolar
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy