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The Hangman's Replacement: Sprout of Disruption (BOOK 1): Sprout of Disruption Kindle Edition
The frantic attempts to find a new hangman were impeded by the lack of suitable candidates. Well-placed sources confirmed that the fear of ‘ngozi’ was a deterrent. According to this traditional belief, the spirit of a murdered person torments the killer and his family for generations. However, this is only half the story. Several promising applicants did come forward. None met the minimum requirements for the job. The selection criteria were designed to exclude the mentally ill, the vindictive, and the sadistic. However, they did not rule out the desperate.
The Sprout of Disruption (Book 1) is told through the shifting perspectives of characters whose lives have been set alight by the plant which sparked the recruitment effort. The parallel threads of the story converge around the aspiring hangman who was obsessed with securing the job, the sympathizers who fought to protect him from his prize, and the anxious men who believed that emptying death row would end their horror before the carnivorous plants constricted around their necks.
READER'S FAVORITE SILVER MEDAL: 2014 AWARDS CONTEST - ADULT HORROR: https://readersfavorite.com/2014-award-contest-winners.htm
KIRKUS REVIEW EXTRACT
"At nearly 500 pages, this intricately woven novel is a disconcerting parable exploded to epic proportions. The author renders its many characters, from the mad genius responsible for the impending botanical apocalypse, to the prostitute/undercover operative who falls in love with Abel, to the seemingly simple Abel himself, with frightening subtlety and detail.... A thought-provoking, singularly strange and absorbing novel."
Link to full review: http://bit.ly/12ibxdU
INDIEREADER REVIEW EXTRACTS
“This is a work of completely bizarre genius. The author has an almost Wodehousian gift with words, decorating his pages with phrases that can make the reader laugh out loud, question long-held assumptions about reality, or send a chill up the spine with just a few deft descriptive touches. Some of the characters, and the situations they find themselves in, can be completely off-the-wall, but the author’s writing ability carefully makes them almost plausible, even natural."
“This is a delightful book for those who enjoy having their perspectives stretched, who take delight in the weird and idiosyncratic, and who love watching a master author do breathtaking juggling acts with the English language."
Link to full review: http://bit.ly/11Jdbd5
SELF-PUBLISHING REVIEW EXTRACTS
“Yet more than once as I laughed my way through this novel, I was reminded of a quotation by Nikolai Gogol that I came across recently: “The longer and more carefully we look at a funny story, the sadder it becomes.” The humor in The Hangman’s Replacement makes us laugh perhaps to keep us from crying. Again like Saramago, Chiveneko uses bizarre situations and sometimes subtle humor to deliver very deep and often disturbing social and political commentary. I think I would have appreciated the book more if I knew more about Zimbabwe’s history, but even lacking specific knowledge that might have turned story into allegory, I couldn’t help but feel the occasional chill as tragically universal themes emerged.”
“Chiveneko is a talented writer. Beautiful metaphors and delightful descriptions, while sometimes a little overdone, are some of the best parts of the book.”
“The Hangman’s Replacement is a long, complex, and challenging novel. But it rewards the reader’s efforts with delightful characters and plenty of laughter, even in the midst of some very disturbing themes.”
Link to full review: http://bit.ly/1bWQc
- LanguageEnglish
- Publication dateJanuary 14, 2013
- File size1384 KB
Editorial Reviews
Review
"The best way to describe The Hangman's Replacement is like a spider's web as it is filled with plot threads that might entangle the unwary fly, but is so complex and beautifully written that you can't help but admire it. Even the most seemingly inconsequential character was connected in some way to the bigger plot and, as The Hangman's Replacement is the first in a series, those were only seeds planted to grow into an even bigger arc." - Readers' Favorite
'Yet more than once as I laughed my way through this novel, I was reminded of a quotation by Nikolai Gogol that I came across recently: "The longer and more carefully we look at a funny story, the sadder it becomes." The humor in The Hangman's Replacement makes us laugh perhaps to keep us from crying. Again like Saramago, Chiveneko uses bizarre situations and sometimes subtle humor to deliver very deep and often disturbing social and political commentary...' - Self-Publishing Review.
"A thought-provoking, singularly strange and absorbing novel." - Kirkus Review
A desperate villager's quest to become Zimbabwe's newest executioner kicks off this intriguing debut horror novel involving man-eating plants, organ harvesting and other uncanny oddities....The author renders its many characters... with frightening subtlety and detail... The boughs of this arboreal shocker threaten to creak under the weight of its ever-mounting plot, but they never quite crack. Instead, readers are left wondering just how deep the roots go.
"A delightful book for those who enjoy having their perspectives stretched, who take delight in the weird and idiosyncratic, and who love watching a master author do breathtaking juggling acts with the English language." - IndieReader
About the Author
Mr. Chiveneko is widely regarded as the most anti-social African author. He is rumoured to have based the Luxon Hurudza character on himself. Even as a child, Mr. Chiveneko was not personable. The boy ignored anyone who tried to start a conversation with him. This behaviour won him the nickname, 'Hombarume', the Shona word for 'hunter'. According to the village elder who gave him the name, the young Taona was destined to spend his entire life hunting for a sense of social etiquette. The elder's prediction turned out to be wrong. The boy never embarked on the quest at all. As a recluse, he spent his life hunting for something else: solitude. Mr. Chiveneko is rumoured to live in a remote location with a hypertensive pangolin, three shrews, and a termite colony (enclosed in a large glass tank).
During the only interview he has ever granted, Mr. Chiveneko confessed that his childhood dream was to become a taxidermist. However, this ambition was shattered when he realized that taxidermy had nothing to do with replacing the bodywork of taxi cabs. In grief, he bought a diary and vented his sorrow on its pages with a feather quill. The experience was refreshing. Through tragedy, he found his calling. The rest is history. To this day, he still writes with feather quills that he picks up along a popular flight path of migrating geese.
Mr. Chiveneko only communicates with the wider world through his long suffering lawyer. Any demonstration of courtesy expressed in his novels, (including the acknowledgements), are the work of his tireless legal representative.
Product details
- ASIN : B00B1KMM2C
- Publisher : Chiveneko Publishing Inc.; First Edition (January 14, 2013)
- Publication date : January 14, 2013
- Language : English
- File size : 1384 KB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Sticky notes : On Kindle Scribe
- Print length : 492 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: #3,743,214 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #2,727 in Occult Suspense
- #18,515 in Occult Horror
- #36,508 in Occult Fiction
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Taona Dumisani Chiveneko is the author of 'The Hangman's Replacement' series. The Zimbabwean citizen was born either between the Zambezi and the Limpopo rivers, or along the road which runs from Mutare to Hwange. Mr. Chiveneko has refused to confirm which option is true. He is also equally circumspect about his age, which he has pegged at: 'More than ten, but less than a hundred-years-old.'
Mr. Chiveneko is widely regarded as the most anti-social African author. He is rumoured to have based the Luxon Hurudza character on himself. Even as a child, Mr. Chiveneko was not personable. The boy ignored anyone who tried to start a conversation with him. This behaviour won him the nickname, 'Hombarume', the Shona word for 'hunter'. According to the village elder who gave him the name, the young Taona was destined to spend his entire life hunting for a sense of social etiquette. The elder's prediction turned out to be wrong. The boy never embarked on the quest at all. As a recluse, he spent his life hunting for something else: solitude.
Mr. Chiveneko is rumoured to live in a remote location with a hypertensive pangolin, three shrews, and a termite colony (enclosed in a large glass tank). He is also the half-proud owner of two cats. Apparently, he only loves one of them, but is compelled to keep them both. The creatures are inseparable companions.
In fact, when Mr. Chiveneko sold the cat he did not like, the remaining one went on a three day hunger strike. Eventually, Mr. Chiveneko was forced to buy back the tubby feline for thrice the price he had sold it. As a miser, this incident was highly traumatic for him. This unusual sacrifice for another living creature reflects a tender side of this enigmatic writer. Nevertheless, that part of the man is very small indeed.
During the only interview he has ever granted, Mr. Chiveneko confessed that his childhood dream was to become a taxidermist. However, this ambition was shattered when he realized that taxidermy had nothing to do with replacing the bodywork of taxi cabs. In grief, he bought a diary and vented his sorrow on its pages with a feather quill. The experience was refreshing. Through tragedy, he found his calling. The rest is history. To this day, he still writes with feather quills that he picks up along a popular flight path of migrating geese.
There are only two pictures of Mr. Chiveneko in existence. Neither image portrays his features clearly. In the first, he wears a thick scarf to hide a recurring case of mumps. He is also wearing an ill-fitting hat that he bought at a second-hand store thirty-two years ago.
The second image is a drawing of the author's alter-ego. The picture depicts the mournful face of an unnamed man with thick dreadlocks. When asked whether this face was a self-portrait, Mr. Chiveneko said it was not. The face came to him during a dream in his youth. For reasons he cannot explain, he felt a strong and instinctive bond with it. 'I felt like it was an alternative expression of me.
Mr. Chiveneko only communicates with the wider world through his long suffering lawyer and staff. Any demonstration of courtesy expressed in his novels, (including the acknowledgements), are the work of his tireless representatives. Any questions about the author and his novels should be sent to: author@chiveneko.com for processing by Chiveneko Publishing staff, which also manages his social media profiles. No hate mail please. It only emboldens the author. However, words of consolation and support for his poor employees are welcome.
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Though I have to admit I got bored for some pages around half time, being tired of yet another in-depth background story of another seemingly non-relevant character, I can't deny the devotion and inventiveness the author shows with every such chapter.
I was often torn between pity for the main character, a man who had lost almost everything and was determined to do anything for the sake of his family, shock about the gruesome task ahead - the hangman's job, and laughter for the humorous descriptions of characters and situations. The unique story-telling and subtle irony make reading this book an unforgettable pleasure. I recommend this book to all readers without restrictions.
(I received a copy of this book from the author in exchange for an honest review)
What I gathered on the second read is just how fraught the novel is with social commentary about poverty, violence, capital punishment, sex, sorcery, and scientific manipulation.
At one point protagonist Abel Muranda has a battle royale with a crocodile, through which the author seems to suggest that, while we cannot stop ourselves from being hurt by life, it behooves us to remain defiant in the face of great odds, and though scarred from the battle, we must remain focused on completing our life's journey while not letting the infection of pain and bitterness deter us from our goals.
Somehow the author says a great deal but doesn't preach. Instead, the various narratives are woven together, and it is up to the reader to follow the thread.
Overall, The Hangman's Replacement is crazy, but crazy good. Major plot elements include international intrigue, conspiracies and killers, goats and gallows, harvesters and hookers, and a vampyric vine with a penchant for people. But somehow, thanks to the humor throughout, this novel works. Don't let the humor fool you, though; the novel tackles some pretty weighty issues.
At the basis of the plot is Abel Muranda, an impoverished Zimbabwean whose sole purpose in visiting the big city of Harare is to find gainful employment as the nation's newest hangman. While some people, including his own starving family, desperately need Abel to get the job, others risk life and limb (not just their own) to be sure someone else becomes the gallows' operator. A battle royale ensues and proffers more layers of intrigue and double-dealing than there are circles in Dante's Inferno (and just about as many less-than-savory, wayward sinners).
Spiritual wickedness in high places and the rulers of darkness abound.
Some people may not like the few loose ends remaining at the close of the novel, but enough questions are answered to make the reader feel that his or her time has not been wasted. I am, however, anxious for the next book in the series, not only to answer my remaining questions but also because I really enjoyed the writer's style and sense of humor. Every character has a unique voice, and the various subplots keep the reader guessing as to how everything is related, which, ultimately, it is, and you really have to pay attention, or you might miss something important.
The novel is dense and layered, but humor keeps it from being a drag. My favorite phrase from The Hangman's Replacement is just waiting on the back of my tongue: "junkyard strumpet!" I'm saving it for the right person, at the right time, in the right place.
I highlighted tons of text as I read, but I'll share just a few items I find either funny or poignant, or both:
"He just sat there, constipating his shirt."
"Planted into the lower part of his skull was a jaw of menacing proportions. If someone ever tried to mug him at gunpoint, all he had to do was to clench it. This alone would demoralize the robber."
"Sometimes, sanity is the mere absence of trauma. Many people are provisionally sane until they are tested by unexpected hardships."
"When you have no regard for humanity, using genius for destruction is the only option."
"The man was wearing a full-body condom. The strange bulges on his face turned out to be swimming goggles."
Yes, this book is crazy, but I laughed while I read it, and it also made me think. I had to actually pay attention so that I didn't miss anything, and I kept trying to figure out how the various narrative threads fit together to weave a whole.
I can offer this novel no higher praise than to say that on more than one occasion it put me in mind of Crime and Punishment and The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. Whether anyone else agrees, that's my opinion, and I'm sticking to it.
The horrible vine did not clearly link up clearly but perhaps that is the next book.
Maybe i missed the point of this book. ALL I GOT WAS GOOD VERSUS CORRUPT much like a parable. But it did not read like a parable. I so wanted to like the parts that were not about the main character but i did not. Or perhaps the pearl among swine was overdone. I am not an editor. It felt unbalanced. I am stretching it to give it three stars. The beginning was 5 stars.
Sorry if i missed the point here. I think a book should aim in a particular direction clearly before the last page even if there are volumes to come.
All that aside, the characters are interesting and eccentric, though sometimes in the last third characterization was lost to advancing the conspiracy...but the book is a series, so there was no need to rush things.
Worth the read, especially if you like reading mysteries/thrillers that take place in non-Western cultures and thus can be a bit educational as well. Hopefully the writing improves in the 2nd book.