Florence of Arabia: A Novel
Florence of Arabia: A Novel book cover

Florence of Arabia: A Novel

Paperback – September 13, 2005

Price
$16.00
Format
Paperback
Pages
272
Publisher
Random House Trade Paperbacks
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0812972269
Dimensions
5.2 x 0.6 x 8 inches
Weight
7.2 ounces

Description

The bestselling author who made mincemeat of political correctness in "Thank You for Smoking, conspiracy theories in "Little Green Men, and Presidential indiscretions "No Way to Treat a First Lady now takes on the hottest topic in the entire world-Arab-American relations-in a blistering comic novel sure to offend the few it doesn't delight. Appalled by the punishment of her rebellious friend Nazrah, youngest and most petulant wife of Prince Bawad of Wasabia, Florence Farfarletti decides to draw a line in the sand. As Deputy to the deputy assistant secretary for Near East Affairs, Florence invents a far-reaching, wide-ranging plan for female emancipation in that part of the world. The U.S. government, of course, tells her to forget it. Publicly, that is. Privately, she's enlisted in a top-secret mission to impose equal rights for the sexes on the small emirate of Matar (pronounced "Mutter"), the "Switzerland of the Persian Gulf." Her crack team: a CIA killer, a snappy PR man, and a brilliant but frustrated gay bureaucrat. Her weapon: TV shows. The lineup on TV Matar includes "A Thousand and One Mornings, a daytime talk show that features self-defense tips to be used against boyfriends during Ramadan; an addictive soap opera featuring strangely familiar members of the Matar royal family; and a sitcom about an inept but ruthless squad of religious police, pitched as ""Friends from Hell." The result: the first deadly car bombs in the country since 1936, a fatwa against the station's entire staff, a struggle for control of the kingdom, and, of course, interference from the French. And that's only the beginning. A merciless dismantling of both American ineptitude andArabic intolerance, "Florence of Arabia is Christopher Buckley's funniest and most serious novel yet, a biting satire of how U.S. good intentions can cause the Shiite to hit the fan. "From the Hardcover edition. Christopher Buckley is a novelist, essayist, humorist, critic, magazine editor, and memoirist. His books have been translated into sixteen foreign languages. He worked as a merchant seaman and White House speechwriter. He has written for many newspapers and magazines and has lectured in more than seventy cities around the world. He was awarded the Thurber Prize for American Humor and the Washington Irving Medal for Literary Excellence. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. CHAPTER ONE xa0 While Nazrah was still dreaming of psychedelic antelopes, the CIA guards and Virginia state trooper Harmon G. Gilletts, weapons drawn, examined their catch through the car’s windows. All they could see, amid the myriad air bags, were two distinctly feminine hands, the one on the left bearing enough diamonds to put all of their children combined through Ivy League colleges and law school. xa0 Another expensive German car drove up, this one bearing Shazzik, looking even more grim than usual, and his two mukfelleen. The CIA guards and Trooper Gilletts noted the diplomatic license plate but did not holster their weapons. xa0 Shazzik emerged from the car and, in his accustomed peremptory manner—Hamooji retainers are not renowned for their courtesy to nonroyals—announced that the vehicle contained a member of the household and asserted his rights of extraction. xa0 This was too much for Trooper Gilletts. As a Marine Corps reservist, he had spent time in Wasabia during one of America’s periodic interventionist spasms in the region. As a result, he could not stand Wasabis (a common enough sentiment among foreign visitors). Six months at the Prince Wadum Air Base had left Gilletts, a reasonable man of no particular bias, hating even the name “Wasabi.” xa0 He dispensed with the usual “sir,” with which he addressed even the most wretched of his highway detainees, thrust out his impressive marine reservist pectorals at the chamberlain while tightening his palm around the grip of his Glock nine-millimeter, and counterasserted jurisdiction on behalf of the sovereign commonwealth of Virginia. Stonewall Jackson at First Bull Run, just down the road from here, had been no less unmovable than Trooper Harmon G. Gilletts. xa0 The CIA guards, meanwhile, had pressed buttons summoning backup in the form of an armored vehicle capable (should any gate situation deteriorate seriously) of launching missiles; also of passing impressive amounts of electrical current through the bodies of the undesirable. A helicopter with snipers was also put into play. Why take chances? Why screw around? xa0 Amid this bruit of riot vehicle, rotor blades, drawn guns, male barking and bantam outthrust of chests, Nazrah’s hallucinations ended. She stirred inside her bulbous polystyrene cocoon. The air bags deflated sufficiently to allow her wriggle room. She peered with horror at the standoff taking place outside her car windows and did what anyone would in such circumstances. She reached for her cell phone. xa0 FLORENCE FARFALETTI HAD been in the U.S. Foreign Service long enough to know that when a phone rings after midnight it is A) never a wrong number and B) never a call you want to get. But being a deputy to the deputy assistant secretary of state for Near Eastern Affairs (DASNEA), she C) had to take the call. xa0 “Farfaletti,” she said with as much professional crisp as she could muster in the middle of a ruined REM cycle. Even though her last name had been spoken aloud for thirty-two years, it still sounded like too many syllables. But having changed her first name, she felt she couldn’t change her surname. It would crush her grandfather, who remained defiantly proud of his service in Mussolini’s army in Ethiopia in the 1930s. Perhaps after he died. He was in his nineties now. Or if she remarried. Meanwhile, she was stuck with the patronymic embarrassment of vowels. xa0 “Flor-ents!” xa0 Florence struggled against the glue of sleep. She recognized the Wasabian difficulty with soft C’s. The voice was young, urgent, scared, familiar. xa0 “Nazrah?” xa0 “It’s me, Florents! It’s Nazrah!” xa0 Florence flicked on the light, grimaced at the clock. What was this about? xa0 She knew Nazrah Hamooj. They had met back in Kaffa, the Wasabi capital, when Florence lived there. Nazrah was the daughter of a lesser sheik of the Azami tribe, quite lovely, intelligent, self-educated—the only education a Wasabi woman could acquire, since they were barred from schooling above age fifteen. Nazrah was irreverent about the other wives, whom she referred to with delighted sarcasm as “my dear sisters.” During her dismal time in Kaffa, Florence heard the gossip: Prince Bawad had married the much younger Nazrah to annoy his snobbish second wife, Bisma, who felt that Nazrah was socially several rungs too low down the ladder. xa0 Florence and Nazrah had reconnected socially in Washington, at an embassy reception, one of the few occasions when Wasabi wives were on public display. They had managed to get together for a half-dozen lunches in French restaurants, where Nazrah ordered expensive wines in view of the frantic Khalil. Florence liked Nazrah. She laughed easily, and she was deliciously indiscreet. Nazrah knew of Florence’s own experience with Wasabi princes and confided in her. Florence dutifully filled out the requisite State Department report after each encounter. Out of decency and respect for her friend, she left out certain details, such as those concerning Prince Bawad’s amatory practices. If Nazrah had confided anything of strategic value or necessity to the United States, Florence would, of course, as an officer of the government, have vouchsafed it to the relevant authority. So why was Nazrah calling at this hour? xa0 “Flor-ents. You must help me—I need asylum! Now, please!” xa0 Florence felt her chest go tight. Asylum. Within the State Department, this was known as “the A-word.” A nightmare term in a bureaucracy consecrated to stasis and inertia. “I want asylum” sent shudders down a thousand rubber spines. It summoned hellish visions of paperwork, cables, meetings, embarrassment, denial, restatement and—invariably—clarification. “I want asylum” ended in tears, approved or denied. Denied, it usually ended up on the evening news, a nation’s shame, the anchorman asking, in tones sepulchral, disappointed and trochaic, “How could something like this have happened in the United States of America?” xa0 Florence was now bolt, wide, awake. The wife of the ambassador of the country that supplied America with the majority of its imported fossil fuel was asking her, a midlevel Foreign Service officer, for asylum. Homeland security alert levels come in six color codes ranging from green to red. Florence’s own alert levels consisted of just three: Cool, Oh Shit and Holy Shit. xa0 Her crisis training kicked in. She heard a voice inside her head. It said, Stall. This was instantly drowned out by a second voice saying, Help. The second voice was real and coming through the phone. It was speaking Wasabi. xa0 Florence found herself saying, “Tell them you’re injured. Insist they take you to a hospital. Fairfax Hospital. Insist. Nazrah—do you understand?” xa0 She rose and dressed and, even though hurrying, put on her pearl earrings. Always wear your earrings, her mother had told her from an early age. xa0 OUTSIDE THE EMERGENCY ROOM entrance, she recognized Shazzik and the two mukfelleen. For the first time in her life, she wished she were wearing a veil. During her months in Wasabia, she’d been required to and never got used to it. xa0 Shazzik was furious, making demands of—she guessed—several CIA security officers. What worried her more was the amount of Virginia state trooper-age outside. Seven cruisers. Someone was bound to call the media, and once that happened, the options narrowed. Few situations, really, are improved by the arrival of news trucks. xa0 Two armed hospital security guards stood athwart the doors to the ER. Florence pulled her scarf over her head as a makeshift veil, lowered her head so as to look demure, and approached. xa0 “I’m here to see Nazrah Hamooj. I am her family.” She made herself seem and sound foreign. With her dark hair and Mediterranean complexion, she looked credibly Middle Eastern. xa0 “Name?” xa0 Neither “Florence” nor “Farfaletti” sounding terribly Wasabian, Florence said, “Melath.” It meant “asylum” in Wasabi, a fact that would in all likelihood be lost on a Virginia hospital security guard. xa0 Word was sent in. It came back: Let her in. xa0 “She’s all right. Her CAT scan and MRI were clean.” xa0 The doctor was young, not quite as good-looking as the ones in television dramas but, from the way he regarded Florence, an appreciator of beauty. Florence had grasped, as soon as boys began to bay outside her windows, that beauty was, in addition to being a gift, a tool, like a Swiss Army knife. xa0 “Could you do another? Just in case?” xa0 “She is your . . .” xa0 “Sister.” xa0 “Well, we’ve established from a medical point of view that your sister is all right. Were you aware that she was drinking?” xa0 “Dear, dear.” xa0 “She’s lucky to be alive.” xa0 “Can you just keep her here? Under observation?” xa0 “This isn’t the Betty Ford Center.” xa0 “A few hours is all I’m asking.” xa0 “The insurance company—” xa0 Florence took the doctor by the arm and tugged him to a corner. He didn’t resist. Men tend to yield to pretty women dragging them off into corners. She dropped the Wasabi accent. xa0 “I am asking you on behalf of the United States government”—she flashed him her State Department ID—“to keep that woman here in this hospital for a few hours. Surely there are some more tests you can give her?” xa0 “What’s going on?” xa0 “Do you know what an honor killing is?” xa0 “This is a hospital, in case you hadn’t—” xa0 “Where she comes from, it’s what happens to a woman who dishonors her husband or relative. No trial, no jury, no appeal, no Supreme Court, no ACLU, just death. By stoning or decapitation. You with me?” xa0 “Who is she?” xa0 “She’s the wife of the Wasabi ambassador. One of his wives, anyway. She tried to run away. If you release her into their custody before I can figure something out, it’s probably a death sentence.” xa0 “Jesus, lady.” xa0 “Sorry to lay that on you.” Florence smiled at the doctor. xa0 “How long am I supposed to keep her?” xa0 “Thank you. Just—a few hours. That would really be great. There’s a tall man outside, Middle Eastern, very unpleasant-looking, thin with a pencil mustache, high forehead and goatee. Tell him you need to do more tests, and she’s in isolation.” xa0 “Oh, man.” xa0 “You’re really, really great to do this. I won’t forget it.” Florence nudged him toward the swinging doors, then located Nazrah and drew the curtain around her bed. xa0 Nazrah had held it together until now, but upon seeing Florence, she burst. The Great Desert in the interior of Wasabia had not seen such moisture in an entire year. She had, in the manner of women of the region, applied copious mascara, which now ran sootily down her tawny checks. Florence listened and nodded and handed her a succession of tissues. Nazrah explained. It hadn’t been planned. She was sorry to have involved Florence. She’d intended to drive to the train station and take the Acela Express to New York City and then . . . whatever the next step was. Then she’d taken the right turn. Then the police car. Then the CIA front gate seemed like . . . Then the crash. And the only person she could think to call was Florence. She was so sorry. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • The bestselling author who made mincemeat of political correctness in
  • Thank You for Smoking
  • , conspiracy theories in
  • Little Green Men
  • , and Presidential indiscretions
  • No Way to Treat a First Lady
  • now takes on the hottest topic in the entire world–Arab-American relations–in a blistering comic novel sure to offend the few it doesn’t delight.Appalled by the punishment of her rebellious friend Nazrah, youngest and most petulant wife of Prince Bawad of Wasabia, Florence Farfarletti decides to draw a line in the sand. As Deputy to the deputy assistant secretary for Near East Affairs, Florence invents a far-reaching, wide-ranging plan for female emancipation in that part of the world.The U.S. government, of course, tells her to forget it. Publicly, that is. Privately, she’s enlisted in a top-secret mission to impose equal rights for the sexes on the small emirate of Matar (pronounced “Mutter”), the “Switzerland of the Persian Gulf.” Her crack team: a CIA killer, a snappy PR man, and a brilliant but frustrated gay bureaucrat. Her weapon: TV shows.The lineup on TV Matar includes
  • A Thousand and One Mornings,
  • a daytime talk show that features self-defense tips to be used against boyfriends during Ramadan; an addictive soap opera featuring strangely familiar members of the Matar royal family; and a sitcom about an inept but ruthless squad of religious police, pitched as “
  • Friends
  • from Hell.”The result: the first deadly car bombs in the country since 1936, a fatwa against the station’s entire staff, a struggle for control of the kingdom, and, of course, interference from the French. And that’s only the beginning.A merciless dismantling of both American ineptitude and Arabic intolerance,
  • Florence of Arabia
  • is Christopher Buckley’s funniest and most serious novel yet, a biting satire of how U.S. good intentions can cause the Shiite to hit the fan.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(86)
★★★★
25%
(72)
★★★
15%
(43)
★★
7%
(20)
23%
(66)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Buckley Persuades Like No One Else

I sought this book because Buckley is my favorite author. I began with "Thank You For Smoking" and then read all of his works. Until this tome, only "Little Green Men" matched the superb wit and wordplay of TYFS.

This may be Buckley's best work yet. While I read it for the laughs, this novel is both informative and persuasive on the political circumstances of the middle east. Moreso than any editorial or talking head, this book demonstrates both the madness of the sheiks and playboy princes of the middle east, not to mention the mullahs, but also the futility of western intervention.

In the final analysis, this book may stand alongside Gulliver's Travels in the annals of great satire.

Brilliant, and I can't wait for Buckley's next work.
13 people found this helpful
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Junk food that is junk

I love good ice cream. My waist line demonstrates that. And I love reading comic and satirical and politically incorrect literature. My bookshelves attest to that. Ever buy a half gallon of cheap ice cream? It has a delightful picture on the box, carefully sculpted and glistening pleasure, but when you open it up, the flavor and texture are corn starch and wax. And the next time you open it, there's some weird congealed stuff in the corner that looks like, well, like things we cannot mention here. So although the box is labeled ice cream, and the picture promises fun and frivolity, and it was in the freezer next to real ice cream, the actual product is something far removed from what ice cream should be.

This book is like that. It feels like a comic novel, with comic characters, funny names, and snappy dialog. It has many paragraphs that are clearly supposed to be funny. I can imagine someone, somewhere laughing aloud at this; maybe the author and his friends. Yet never was I thoroughly engaged, and only on a couple of occasions did I even chuckle. That is not to say there is not some clever writing in here. There is. It's just that the wit is surrounded by mountains of tedium, and the occasional flashes almost startle with their rarity. This book was apparently written at breakneck speed, and it shows. The super-hero team, who become passionate lovers, outsmart, outshoot, outwit and outrun hordes of enemies, Muslim, French and American. Until the big discovery at the end. Yawnnnnnn..... I was just glad to close the book.
7 people found this helpful
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Buckley is at the Top of His Game in This One!

I got this book because I enjoyed "No Way to Treat a First Lady". As I listened to it in my car, I must have gasped, sniggered, chuckled, snorted and laughed out loud often enough to make the drivers in the next lane wonder if I needed any special medication. This book is witty, entertaining, and like all the best satire, provides an all-too accurate look at some of the crimes and foibles of our past and present. The plot utterly fails to be predictable, the humor is twice as funny because you know IT REALLY COULD HAPPEN EXACTLY THIS WAY!

The excellent narration on the audio version added even more to the enjoyment, as the reader had a voice for every character and there was never any doubt who was speaking.

An excellent read or listen, not to be missed by those who appreciate political humor and satire.
6 people found this helpful
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Theocrats will hate it

A satire with Islamic theocracy at its core is something relevant to the times, and Christopher Buckley spares no one in this novel. The main object of Buckley's sharp wit is indeed religious piety and hypocrisy (and how refreshing to see a writer mock a religion other than Christianity, they all deserve a few potshots now and then) but he also mocks the history that shaped the modern Middle East, the disastrous efforts of the United States to intervene in Middle Eastern affairs, and the CIA, just to name a few.
The plot is a little hackneyed and too convenient in places, but Buckley's sharp dialogue and dry humor acts as nice ballast to some of the more mundane aspects of the text. Buckley's endemic weakness for ending his novels also rears its ugly head in this book, but I have come to accept that aspect of his writing.
The novel is a mix between action story (here Buckley is out of his element) religious satire (one of the text's strongest assets) and clarion call for gender equality (here Buckley makes every male character look dumb, sneaky, or gung ho). Although the mix is eclectic, the concoction Buckley comes up with works, and as an entertainment this novel is superb. It also has the pang of recognition that all good satire should have. Considering its subject matter, I wish more people were writing about it.
This novel is not a waste of time, and a quick and engaging read. It deserves your attention.
3 people found this helpful
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Comic gem tinged with anger and sorrow over Middle East sexism - but still comic

Christopher Buckley ("Thank You for Smoking," "Boomsday") has had me laughing out loud in public while reading his books. His combination of sarcasm, satire, and political savvy make his books required reading for anyone who considers himself a student of current affairs or politics. Hypocrisy rules the day in Buckley's universe and provides a target-rich environment for his rapier-sharp pen.

With "Florence of Arabia," Buckley takes on the Middle East's pathetic treatment of women and the world's even more repulsive response to it. Buckley is writing with more rage with "Florence" than is apparent in his other novels, where he seems to be motivated more by rueful sadness. Here, Buckley knows we are talking about the humane (or lack thereof) treatment of over half the population of a massive region of the world - this is Buckley's "I'm mad as hell, and I'm not taking it anymore!" moment.

The titular Florence is Florence Farfaletti, a proud Italian woman still semi-reeling from her marriage to a crown prince of Wasabia (a "Wasabi"). Wasabia is a semi-fictional country in the Middle East that is both oil-rich and run by ultra-orthodox mullahs who believe that the only time a woman should be heard is while she's being publicly whipped for some transgression (like fleeing a burning building without wearing a veil). Florence is shocked into action by the execution of a friend who is married to a big player in the Wasabi royal family because she drove a car. She proposes using feminism to bring stability to the Middle East.

As a member of the State Department, this proposal a) gets her demoted and b) attracts the attention of a super-secret cabal within the U.S. government that puts unlimited resources at Florence's command to do just what she wants. Soon, Florence is in charge of a new channel broadcasting across the Middle East from Matar, the Switzerland of the Middle East (basically the land of the fat rich and happy because they are the only pipeline for Wasabi oil to the rest of the world).

But things don't stay calm for long as the conservative, sexist leaders of the Middle East fight back against Florence's crusade (and I don't use that word lightly). Florence leaps from frying pan to fire and back again as she sparks a revolution.

Unlike some of Buckley's other comic novels, this revolution produces dead bodies. This is dark yet funny stuff. Buckley keeps things as light as he can (I personally loved his reference to Volume XXI of Henry Kissinger's memoirs, entitled "Years of Genius"), but it's clear that he's writing this novel for more than just its comic possibilities.

This is a darn good book for anyone who has thought about the Middle East. It doesn't pretend to have all the answers, but it asks a lot of the right questions. And it will have you laughing to boot. Grab a copy.
3 people found this helpful
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Middle East Hijinks

In a country where the man at the helm is an ex drug fiend alcoholic, we're spreading liberty to people who want nothing more than to blow us up, and medicare is closing its doors to the elderly... you just need to escape.

Mr. Buckley one ups standard escapism - he keeps the horror of real life and saturates it in witty comedy, dialogue and situations.

You're still escaping from the terrible times we exist in... but he makes plenty of worthy references to keep us anchored.

This book is a quick, sinfully sweet read. Pick up a newspaper, read the Middle East news, and then pick up Florence.

It's a roadside bomb of pure genius!
3 people found this helpful
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Satire pushed to the edge....

This wonderful Christopher Buckley novel was recommended to me as a hilarious tale of disguise and satire. Although, it is certainly satire, the bite is much too harsh for me to find it humorous. Once I relinquished my notion of this as humor, I found the novel both illuminating and enjoyable, as a brave woman forges ahead with her plan to bring empowerment to the women of the Mid-East. Very well written and fascinating, I recommened this book despite quite a bit of violence and brutality, which generally speaking, is not my cup of tea.
3 people found this helpful
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Absurdity in an Abaya

The irreverent Mr. Buckley, having already thoroughly mocked lobbyists supporting cigarettes, guns and alcohol in Thank You for Smoking, turns to a subject somewhat less tapped for slapstick and satire: the Middle East.

Assistant to the assistant to the deputy of Middle Eastern Affairs, Florence Farfaletti accidentally gets mixed up in the execution of the wife of a (fictional) Middle Eastern diplomat. She is then volunteered for subsequent covert operation to bring woman's rights to the most misogynistic corner of the planet via a woman's Arabic TV station. This is a station where anchorwomen in abayas trip over things on screen because they can't see past a one degree angle of incident. The true life consequences of what will happen to the aforementioned abaya'd women who urge their audiences to mail-order books on woman's rights "packaged for your privacy and protection" are not particularly humorous, and Buckley is realistic enough to recognize this. Actually, "Wasabi" regime's reaction to the woman's movement is pretty bloody, and soon Florence is watching the outspoken women around her get arrested, stoned and beaten to death...

This book surprised me in both its hilarity and its brutality, reminding me that even though it is satire, it still rings plausible with respect to the current state of woman's rights in the Middle East today. I did enjoy Buckley's faux-political history lessons (like "Let's Put Iraq Here and Jordan Over Here: Drawing Borders in the Middle East"), but the "love story" element did not quite work for me--gratuitous, unemotional sex. Overall, worthwhile for the snappy commentary, but not without its flaws.
2 people found this helpful
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Hilarious...

Arrived quickly and well packaged. Laughed my way through this book. Provides an underlying perspective of "life" in the Middle East for women. While written with sardonic/wry humor about a serious subject.
1 people found this helpful
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Great romance novel

This book has an excellent plot and is presented in an original way. Florence seeks to bring stability to the Middle East by using her spicy personality to liberate women via a tv show. Where this book goes wrong is the over-narraton of the main character. Every time she is mentioned or about to do something, the author includes a long string of adjectives to describe how amazing she is. That was great and all but it always took away from the scene.
1 people found this helpful