a book review from amazon

This is a well-written book that explores Anglo-Indian relations through the power of romance. Set in two distinct eras, colonial India of the nineteen twenties, during the time of the Raj, and the independent, freewheeling India of the seventies, during the time when India was a mecca for disenfranchised youth, it tells the story of two women.

One story is that of Olivia, the wife of a minor district official in colonial India, who in 1923 caused great scandal by running off with the Nawab, a local Indian prince. Divorced by her husband, Douglas, for this scandalous transgression, Olivia remains in India, while Douglas remarries. The second story is that of the narrator, a descendant of Douglas and his second wife. During the nineteen seventies, fascinated by the story of the now deceased Olivia, she goes to India, visiting those locations where Olivia had lived and those that would have been a part of her existence at the time. As did Olivia, she falls under India’s spell. As did Olivia, she, too, has an Anglo-Indian love affair, and picks up where Olivia left off, giving the reader a powerful sense of de-ja vu.

The book is a beguiling story of two women from two different generations who come under the spell of India. The book is evocative of British colonial India, as well as of India of the nineteen seventies. During both eras, Anglo-Indian relations are pivotal to the budding romances. The book is evocative of the rhythms of Indian life in all its richness and tumultuousness, as well as its lingering poverty and superstitions. It is redolent of a time gone by and hopeful of what is to come. It is also an interesting dichotomy of the good and bad in both cultures, Anglo and Indian, and the influence that both cultures have on these two women, who are so different, yet so alike.

This is a book that whets the appetite, leaving the reader wanting more than the author is prepared to give. It is, nonetheless, a book well worth reading. The book was also made into a Merchant Ivory film starring Julie Christie and Greta Scacchi that is well worth watching.”

my comment:

I really agree with the demonstration of the content of the book but although I also like the book somewhow I would not advise someone to read it for good entertainment but for getting interesting information about Indian culure etc.

Paula

Published in: on May 22, 2008 at 8:05 am Leave a Comment

a new end..

the narrator:

When I left Maji’s hut I felt much better and I was really looking forward to my pregnancy. Soon I recognised that Inder Lal was not being a father out of conviction and that I did not want to destroy his family, neither did I truly love him. Additionally I more and more noticed the change of my personality India was causing, so I decided to go back to England.

Having retraced Olivia’s life in India I was afraid of living the same life, only 50 years later. Still I wanted to visit Olivia’s house up in the mountains and say good bye to India in an adequate way.

I will miss India, Marji, the culture and of couse Inder Lal, but it is not the country in which English people should live, it belongs to the Indians..  I took the next ship home.

(sorry not that imaginative) - Paula
Published in: on May 21, 2008 at 3:55 pm Comments (5)

the end

my opinion

I really do not like the end. During the whole book I was waiting for the turning point or at least a more spectacular elopement. As well I am a person preferring a happy end and this is definitely not given. Everyone just seems to accept the situation, Douglas marries again but does not seem happy, Olivia turns out to live alone, and the Nawab is still in big financial problems and even lost his good looks.Only Harry somehow seems to be satisfied with his life.The only interesting thing about the end of the book is that the narrator suddenly mixes up the to plots, which in my opinion serves to illustrate the climax of the parallels between Olivia’s story and the narrator’s story and of cause supported by the fact that narrator is probably giving birth to her baby at the same place where Olivia lived the rest of her life….

by Paula

Published in: on May 8, 2008 at 8:26 am Comments (2)

Olivias’s baby

by Paula

Published in: on May 2, 2008 at 1:42 pm Leave a Comment