Spence, an unemployed oil worker, accepts the job of taking inventory after a plane carrying a crew of oil workers from a Madagascar rig explodes, and struggles to unravel a bloody conspiracy that has made its next deadly mark--on him. Reprint.
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Times are hard in Madagascar. Many people had pinned their hopes on the discovery of oil; but there is not oil, and in a tragic finale to the futile exploration, a plane crash kills the departing foreign drillers. In Canada, Spence, an injured rig worker, is offered the job of taking an inventory of the Madagascan rig. He accepts reluctantly, realizing that only his work can save him from the battle. But in the dusty, decrepit environment of French East Africa, his seemingly simple task becomes increasingly complex. Slowly he discovers the paranoid notion that the air crash was no accident. Like John Collee's previous two novels, The Rig is a page-turning thriller laced with accute observations and memorable characters - the driven, almost crippled Spence, the beautiful, half-french, half-African Perpetude Peyrame, the drunken polygamist Morgan Hanssen, the casual murderer Elgin Kirk, Mitchell the lonely missionary, and Velo-André, the poignantly optimistic 'Ministre des Ressources Minérales' - all fallible people blown like sand into the grinding wheels of international power.
An oilman on the skids pulls himself together to fly to the Indian Ocean to see whether a plane full of his old colleagues fell from the sky or was pushed. Collee is the author of the medical thrillers A Paper Mask and Kingsley's Touch. Spence, a boozy, brokenhearted Canadian with either no first name or no last, attends the funeral of a dozen fellow oil-workers whose charter flight from Madagascar crashed seconds after takeoff. At the funeral, Spence spies the faithless wife whose betrayal sent him into an alcoholic tailspin and the crippling, near-fatal accident that ended his own career. He also sees his newly widowed friend Cora, who begs him to find out whether there's any basis to the rumor that the flight on which her husband died was sabotaged. Spence combines the unpaid detective work with a contract to tidy up the African drilling site. But he lands in the middle of political upheaval: Madagascar's honest but luckless government is about to fall, a victim of its own unfulfilled hopes for the discovery of oil that would rebuild the impoverished country. Wanting to take power is a charismatic, Sorbonne-educated onetime radical. At the drilling site, Spence checks into a hotel run by the ravishing Mme. Perpetuda Peyrame, who is, oddly enough, another Sorbonne graduate. Before he can pack up the rig for sale to the government, Spence gets his hands on the last records of the drilling team and finds--what's this?--there really was oil after all. Lots and lots of it. Did Norco, the firm that paid for the drilling, know about this? If they did, why did they close the site? And why didn't they tell anyone about the fabulous discovery? Sophisticated thriller that hops back and forth from the untouristed tropics to the steppes of Alberta to great effect. -- Copyright ©1992, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
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