Intercut with episodes from Hope's disastrous marriage and an ongoing African civil war, Boyd's latest invokes hit-you-with-a-two-by- four parallels between primate and human aggressiona clichÇ to be sure. Mallabar's defensiveness, and a ham-fisted accident that destroys Hope's research journal, fire her ambition to prove him wrongand a bitter struggle is underway. Mallabar, who has established worldwide fame on the strength of chimpanzee studies with titles like The Peaceful Primate, refuses to accept Hope's claim that a local chimpanzee population is showing signs of extreme violence. When not noting some peculiar goings-on among the local chimps, Hopeconvincing, stiff-necked, proud in her own waytracks the subtle hierarchy of Mallabar's realm: doting wife Ginga, henchman Hauser, the hapless adulterer Ian Vail. Led by Eugene Mallabar, an international scholar with a sever dose of hubris, and staffed by a familiar breed of academic toads and careerists, Grosso Arvore becomes as much a study of human nature for Hope as the local chimpanzee observation group. Hope Clearwater is a member of the Grosso Arvore Research Project in Africa, an ongoing study into the behavior of primates. Opting for a leaner, meaner approach than in his earlier work, Boyd here demonstrates he is capable of a serious, tightly controlled narrative as well as the comic-satiric exuberance of A Good Man in Africa (1982) and The New Confessions (1988).
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