The Enemy in the Blanket
Encyclopedia
The Enemy in the Blanket (1958) is the second novel in Anthony Burgess
Anthony Burgess
John Burgess Wilson  – who published under the pen name Anthony Burgess – was an English author, poet, playwright, composer, linguist, translator and critic. The dystopian satire A Clockwork Orange is Burgess's most famous novel, though he dismissed it as one of his lesser works...

's Malayan Trilogy The Long Day Wanes
The Long Day Wanes
The Long Day Wanes: A Malayan Trilogy, also published as The Malayan Trilogy, is Anthony Burgess's novel cycle about the withdrawal from empire....

. The idiom in the title signifies "traitor" while also alluding to the struggles of marriage. The novel charts the continuing adventures of Victor Crabbe, who becomes headmaster of a school in the imaginary sultanate of Dahanga in the years and months leading up to Malayan independence.

Burgess was dismayed by the design of the cover of the 1958 Heinemann edition of the novel (pictured right), presumably designed in London. It shows a Sikh working as a ricksha-puller, something unheard of in Malaya or anywhere else. He wrote in his autobiography (Little Wilson and Big God
Little Wilson and Big God, Being the First Part of the Confessions of Anthony Burgess
Little Wilson and Big God, volume I of Anthony Burgess's autobiography, was first published by Heinemann in 1986. It won the J. R. Ackerley Prize for Autobiography....

, p. 416): "The design on [the] dust-jacket showed a Sikh pulling a white man and woman in a jinrickshaw. I, who had always looked up to publishers, was discovering that they could be as inept as authors. The reviewers would blame me, not the cover-designer, for that blatant display of ignorance."

Characters

  • Victor Crabbe
  • Fenella, Crabbe's wife
  • Abdul Kadir, Crabbe's hard-drinking and foul-mouthed teaching colleague at the school, whose every sentence includes the words "For fuck's sake!"
  • The hard-up lawyer Rupert Hardman, who converts to Islam in order to wed a domineering Muslim woman, 'Che Normah, for her money. He later bitterly regrets it and tries to return to the West in order to escape the marriage. (The inclusion of the Hardman character sparked a libel suit that halted sales of the novel, but the suit was eventually thrown out by a Singapore court.)
  • Talbot, the State Education Officer, a fat-buttocked gourmand whom Victor Crabbe cuckolds
  • Anne Talbot, Talbot's wife, a wanton adulteress
  • The womanising Abang of Dahanga, who is also a devotee of chess and who aims both to seduce Crabbe's wife and to purloin his car
  • Father Laforgue, a priest who has spent most of his life in China and longs to return there but is prevented from doing so, having been banished by the Communist regime that came to power in Beijing a decade earlier
  • Ah Wing, Crabbe's elderly Chinese cook who, it emerges, has been supplying the insurgents with provisions
  • Jaganathan, a fellow teacher who plots to supplant and ruin Crabbe
  • Mohinder Singh, a shopkeeper trying desperately, and failing, to compete with Chinese traders
The source of this article is wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.  The text of this article is licensed under the GFDL.
 
x
OK