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playground of the gods

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The Playground of The Gods Cathy Spellman's, The
Playground of The Gods is an exuberant novel which deals with murder in
a remote tropical paradise but can further be read as an illustration of
man's ignorance and invasion of nature. "Do it big, or stay in bed."(
Larry Kelly). These are words that Thoros Gagarian lives by. He is one
of the wealthiest men in the world and when picking his private paradise,
only one place on earth could serve his needs and fantasies. This place
is Mora Utu-The playground of the Gods-a green jewel in the placid blue
expanse of the South Pacific, the most luxurious and seductive private
preserve anywhere on the planet. Once his prized-possession has been
found, Thoros immediately ships the island natives to a different island
and brings in his construction crews to hurriedly build his paradise in
order to have it ready for a celebratory visit by 12 of his close friends.
In the introduction to the story, Cathy Spellman makes clear the
notion that the protagonist, Thoros Gagarian views himself as an
indestructible god. Her descriptions of his haste purchase of his Island
paradise shows a man for whom their is no boundaries. His arrogance is
further displayed in his building of his compound. Spellman's voice of
reason comes from a spiritual Mexican couple who are Thoros's servants.
They not only warn but predict of many consequences to the ignorance
to which nature is being shown. "Nature will not permit alteration on such
a scale."(Emilio, 114). However, these warnings are ignored
by the men who do not appreciate a bizarre servant couple speaking of
things which money can't buy and power can't control. This is when
Spellman's utilization of irony comes into the picture. A member of the
party catches a tropical fever, yet he can't be cured because the tree
which possesses the antidote was destroyed in the creation of the facility.
This is followed by a serendipitous chain of events which is climaxed
when an immense typhoon hits the island and takes two of its visitors as
its sacrifices. "In nature there are neither rewards nor punishments, there
are consequences."(Ingersoll). This statement indicates the underlying


theme of the novel. Man's ignorance regarding nature is a fatuous fault,
for which he will have to face the consequences. Whether it be in the
near future, or impending on him till the moment where he realizes that
his ignorance has not come without its price.

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