The Royston Expansion
Uitgelicht
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13,51 |
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13,51 |
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15,00
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Beschrijving
Bol
Royston Hamilton believes in systems.He believes that if you keep things tidy, predictable, and dull enough, they will continue to work. He believes authority comes from routine, not force. He believes paperwork is a form of control. And above all, he believes that nothing ever really collapses - it just gets absorbed into something quieter.Set in and around Featherstone, The Royston Expansion follows a small-time operator whose ambitions never quite turn spectacular, never quite fail, and never attract the kind of attention that leads to consequences. Royston does not run an empire. He manages arrangements. Salons open. Coffee moves. Favours are granted and withdrawn. Meetings happen in cars, back rooms, drive-through lanes, and places that look normal enough not to matter.The police notice him, briefly. Teachers feel unsettled. Business records don't quite line up. A more competent man does the worst of the work and writes it down like a lesson plan. Nothing escalates. Everything continues.Told through a mixture of conventional chapters and documentary fragments - police logs, business notes, diary entries, text messages, and private doctrine - the novel builds a portrait of crime as administration rather than chaos. There are no heists, no glamour, no redemptive arcs. Instead, the story unfolds through routine, misapplied confidence, and the quiet comedy of systems being trusted far beyond what they deserve.Darkly funny without ever trying to be, The Royston Expansion finds its humour in understatement, bureaucracy, and the gap between how power imagines itself and how it actually operates. A chorus of terrapins offers sideways commentary on ambition and survival, while Royston's own attempts to impose meaning - through pop-culture analysis, management logic, and borrowed myth - only expose how little control he really has.This is a crime novel without catharsis, a comedy without punchlines, and a procedural where nothing is ever resolved because resolution would require someone to care enough to stop it.For readers who enjoy intelligent, unsettling fiction that trusts them to draw their own conclusions, The Royston Expansion offers a sharp, original take on modern crime, institutional indifference, and the strange comfort of things continuing exactly as they are.
Royston Hamilton believes in systems.He believes that if you keep things tidy, predictable, and dull enough, they will continue to work. He believes authority comes from routine, not force. He believes paperwork is a form of control. And above all, he believes that nothing ever really collapses - it just gets absorbed into something quieter.Set in and around Featherstone, The Royston Expansion follows a small-time operator whose ambitions never quite turn spectacular, never quite fail, and never attract the kind of attention that leads to consequences. Royston does not run an empire. He manages arrangements. Salons open. Coffee moves. Favours are granted and withdrawn. Meetings happen in cars, back rooms, drive-through lanes, and places that look normal enough not to matter.The police notice him, briefly. Teachers feel unsettled. Business records don't quite line up. A more competent man does the worst of the work and writes it down like a lesson plan. Nothing escalates. Everything continues.Told through a mixture of conventional chapters and documentary fragments - police logs, business notes, diary entries, text messages, and private doctrine - the novel builds a portrait of crime as administration rather than chaos. There are no heists, no glamour, no redemptive arcs. Instead, the story unfolds through routine, misapplied confidence, and the quiet comedy of systems being trusted far beyond what they deserve.Darkly funny without ever trying to be, The Royston Expansion finds its humour in understatement, bureaucracy, and the gap between how power imagines itself and how it actually operates. A chorus of terrapins offers sideways commentary on ambition and survival, while Royston's own attempts to impose meaning - through pop-culture analysis, management logic, and borrowed myth - only expose how little control he really has.This is a crime novel without catharsis, a comedy without punchlines, and a procedural where nothing is ever resolved because resolution would require someone to care enough to stop it.For readers who enjoy intelligent, unsettling fiction that trusts them to draw their own conclusions, The Royston Expansion offers a sharp, original take on modern crime, institutional indifference, and the strange comfort of things continuing exactly as they are.
AmazonPagina's: 355, Paperback, Independently published
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