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East of the Sun

By: Julia Gregson
Binding: Hardcover
Publisher: Orion
ISBN: 0752865811
ISBN-13: 9780752865812
Released: 12 Jun 2008
RRP: £18.99
Average Rating:


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Customer Reviews

A gripping read - By: J. Hoff, 04 Jan 2009
I thought that this book was a gripping read & difficult to put down, even my husband enjoyed it & he does not normally read the same books as I do. It evoked the between-the-wars era when it was considered normal for expats to spend years away from home & familyin the colonies, rarely going home because of the slow methods of transportation, & cutting themselves off from friends & family & all that was familiar. The thought of sending an 18-year old daughter across the world alone to marry a man she hardly knew would be unheard of now! The only weak links were the characterisation of Jack (why on earth did he become hastily engaged to a girl he hardly knew while home on leave when he was still fairly young & had a sumptuous Indian mistress who he adored?) I found him was a rather unpleasant & confused character with whom it was hard to empathise. The storyline about Guy Glover could well have been dropped when they landedin Bombay, or even omitted totally. It added nothing to the story & one longed to be rid of his irritating appearancesin an otherwise charming book.
Awful! Don't bother! - By: DS, 28 Dec 2008
This was a novel that I so wanted to give a chance. Sadly, it was long winded & boring. The characters get irritating & after a while I actually stopped caring about them. The history is compelling & the descriptions are satisfactory. I actually stopped reading this novel 3/4 of the way through.
A wonderful Read - By: William55, 08 Dec 2008
I loved this book. The sort of book that makes you smile, evoking time, place & character with deceptive ease. While never being preachy, & always being first & foremost an enjoyable story, the book has a serious underlying theme: the fragile status of single women at that time, resonatingin the larger fragility of an India about to free itself of colonialism. Lovely.
Wonderfully enjoyable read - By: hat, 24 Nov 2008
Setin a wonderfully well imagined 1920s, this is the story of three young women who travel (first class, by sea) to India. Eighteen-year-old Rose is going to be married, to a young man she hardly knows. Her friend, bubbly, insecure Victoria (Tor) is to be her bridesmaid -- delighted to escape from her domineering, critical mother, she also hopes to find herself a husband. The third, Viva, is a few years older but has managed to get her fare paid by the girls' mothersin return for acting as their chaperone. Brought upin India until the age of eight, Viva has livedin England ever since & has mixed feelings about returning to the country where both her parents & her older sister died. Alsoin Viva's care on the ship is Guy Glover, an unstable sixteen-year-old, whose peculiar attachment to Viva will be the cause of some very dangerous & frightening events later on. I really liked the way the narrative moved between the three girls' stories, & this technique made the novel even more tantalisingly readable, as when one girl's chapter ends -- often with a bit of a cliff-hanger -- you have to wait for two more chapters to pass until you find out the outcome of whatever situation each has got themselves into (if that makes sense). Being already a lover of India & knowing Bombay a little bit, I found the descriptions of life there all those years ago absolutely fascinating. The choice of historical period was an interesting one -- although it would be another twenty years before India achieved independence, the rumblings are already making themselves felt, Gandhi is already on the scene, & the British are feeling increasingly insecure. Nevertheless, life for these privileged young people is pretty easy & luxurious, though Viva, somewhat impoverished & needing to support herself, comes into contact with a rather different side of Bombay life when she gets a jobin an orphanage. Of course there are love stories, some with happy endings & others less so. Allin all this is the most marvellously attractive book. Comfort reading,in a sense, but high quality comfort reading. I look forward very much to Julia Gregson's forthcoming Jasmine Nights, & must try to get hold of her earlier novel The Water Horse. An author to watch.
Extremely disappointing - By: jintyb, 19 Nov 2008
As this was a Richard & Judy recommended read, I thought this would be a cracking read. How wrong I was! Very slow; boring two dimensional characters, Im afraid it went to the charity shop before I reached the end. I read two-thirds of it, by which time I was ready to scream with annoyance!

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