When Gregory Hawke, a burnt-out case from the Spanish civil war, seeks
refuge at the remote utopian commune his uncle, the Reverend Harmston,
has set up among the local Amerindians one hundred miles up the Berbice
River, he finds a society devoted to 'Hard work, frank love and
wholesome play'.
Apparently free-thinking and ecologically green before its time, Gregory
finds much in Berkelhoost to attract him, particularly when his pretty
cousin Mabel shows an unmistakeable interest. But there is an
authoritarian side to the project that alarms Gregory's democratic
instincts and it is this which makes it impossible to read the novel,
first published in 1951, without seeing elements of prophecy - of the
fate of the People's Temple commune at Jonestown in Guyana in 1978.
No such dreadful end awaits the generality of the communards, but in
this most inventive of Mittelholzer's novels there are darker notes
beneath the generally comic tone.
Edgar Mittelholzer was born in British Guiana in 1909. He wrote more
than twenty novels. He eventually settled in England, where he lived
until his death in 1965, a suicide predicted in several of his novels.