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Ludmila's Broken English

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Language
  
English

Media type
  
Print

ISBN
  
0-571-21518-1

Originally published
  
2 March 2006

Page count
  
318

Publisher
  
Faber and Faber

2.9/5
Goodreads

Publication date
  
2 March 2006

Pages
  
318

OCLC
  
62532920

Author
  
DBC Pierre

Genre
  
Black comedy

Country
  
United Kingdom

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Similar
  
Lights Out in Wonderland, Breakfast with the Borgias, Vernon God Little, Petit Mal, Release the Bats: Writing Y

Ludmila's Broken English is the second novel by Booker Prize winner DBC Pierre. It was published in March 2006.

Contents

Plot introduction

The novel follows two initially separate narratives set in the United Kingdom and Eastern Europe. Recently separated - at the age of 33 - conjoined twins Blair Albert and Gordon-Marie "Bunny" Heath struggle to cope with life in a post-globalisation and fully privatised London. Meanwhile, Ludmila Derev, an impoverished young woman living in the war-torn Southern Caucasus, leaves her mountain home to meet up with her boyfriend in the region's major town and send money back to her family. However, things start to go wrong and she ends up with her picture on a Russian Brides website. Slowly her life and those of the twins are drawn together.

Quotes

"Blair Albert and Gordon-Marie Heath were omphalopagus: conjoined anteriorly at the trunk. They shared certain organs, but not the heart."

"While Blair possessed the twins' physical power - forza - their cunning resided in Gordon, making him dominant in most situations, despite being the weaker twin."

After being sent to Eastern Europe by Blair's American boss - Truman, Blair gives the twins sachets of "solipsidrine" whenever they need some confidence. Bunny however thinks the drug has a major problem:

"Listen: the qualities removed by your so-called cocktail are there for a purpose, Blair. They're the little voices that stop us raping and pillaging. It might suit your Yank mate to do away with them, but we're civilised people, from an ancient, civilised country."

Later Bunny again talks of the drug:

"Do you know what this drug does? Do you know its single active quality? The suspension of conscience, Blair. Do you hear?"

Political parallels

The twins are named Blair Albert Heath and Gordon-Marie "Bunny" Heath - something many commentators have taken as a reference to Tony Blair and Gordon Brown. Their father is Ted Heath - a possible reference to Edward Heath.

Blair is employed by a company called "Global Liberty Solutions" run by an American, Truman (the surname of an American president, Harry Truman), to go to a foreign country and sort out a problem. He is given a drug, which suspends the "conscience", to get him through difficult situations. His arrival in the country leads to the shooting of the majority of Blair's hosts, and the rape of the family's daughter.

References

Ludmila's Broken English Wikipedia