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| The Glass Palace | 
enlarge | Author: Amitav Ghosh Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers Ltd Category: Book
List Price: £7.99 Buy Used: £0.01 You Save: £7.98 (100%)
New (38) Collectible (1) from £1.00
Avg. Customer Rating: 27 reviews Sales Rank: 3487
Media: Paperback Edition: New Ed Pages: 560 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.9 Dimensions (in): 7.8 x 5.1 x 1.6
ISBN: 000651409X Dewey Decimal Number: 813 EAN: 9780006514091 ASIN: 000651409X
Publication Date: June 18, 2001 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days Condition: SUPER FAST DELIVERY DISPATCHED SAME DAY FROM UK.
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Amazon.co.uk Review Beginning in 1885, with the British invasion of Mandalay and the capture of the Burmese king and queen, and encompassing over 100 years to modern-day India and Burma (Myanmar), Amitav Ghosh has created in The Glass Palace a monument to life in colonial central and Southeast Asia. The story follows three generations from three families, spreading its wings across the world, from Malaya to New York. Yet despite the epic scale, the gentle and intimate detail of the characters and their interwoven relationships removes any need for an understanding of this area of the world in geographical or historical terms. The map at the back of the book is useful for following the characters' travels as their fortunes and rulers (British, Japanese, military government) change, but it is the atmosphere and feel of the era and location that Ghosh captures astutely. Each city or border is not a mark on a map with political significance but a home, a memory and a reality.With each generation the characters' lives and personalities contrast and intertwine according to the rise and fall of the countries'--and the world's--politics. Rajkumar, the Indian peasant who makes a fortune through teak and his wife Dolly, the breathtakingly beautiful maid of the Burmese royal family, contrast to Uma the Indian widow who becomes a champion for Indian independence after her liberating time in the USA and the Americanised Matthew who makes a life in his half-native Malaya as a rubber plantation owner, while Uma's Bengali nieces and nephew contrast to Rajkumar and Dolly's newly wealthy sons. Yet they all suffer in the Second World War, whether as a soldier, refugee or evacuee discriminated against because of their skin colour. Ghosh's focus on the war in Burma, from the viewpoint of Indian officers in the British army, who have been imbued through their regimental history to believe in their allegiance to "their" country (i.e. Britain and not India), reveals a side of both world wars that is rarely told. The struggle these British subjects experience, as to whether colonial or fascist masters are better, is not something that shaped the general European knowledge of the Second World War, where "good" and "evil" seemed much clearer. However, The Glass Palace is not only about war; and the full circle it travels, from one glass palace in the lush and rich 19th-century Burma to another glass palace in repressed and impoverished Myanmar is, seemingly with ease from the lush and rich prose, satisfying and informative. It is a novel in which the characters will always go on living, and whose ideals will never die. --Olivia Dickinson
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| Customer Reviews: Read 22 more reviews...
Beautiful story March 14, 2008 I thought this book was beautiful and very well told. Eventhough the story spanned over 100 years, it was easy to follow each generation of characters and the historical background which influenced each one.
Glass Palace- a brilliant read! March 4, 2007 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
This book is one of those ones you simply do not want to end. A bit slow and over descriptive at one point, but once I got back into it -I thought it superb. The characters and story are excellent and the descriptions of local places convincing and real. I wish I had read this before going to Burma but better late than never. I am now inspired to read his other books!
Beautiful reading August 30, 2006 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
The Glass Palace was a beautiful read. I picked it up while I was traveling through Thailand and Malaysia. It was amazing to be in that part of the world while reading this novel. I was actually on a beach in Penang when the characters in the book arrived on the island! As the story follows three generations, you are enveloped into the story more and more. Ghosh has done a wonderful job connecting the families through history. I have recommended this book to a variety of friends and they have all loved it too!
Not sure about this one... July 31, 2006 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
I have given this book 3 stars, not as a comment on how well it is written, but on my own personal enjoyment of it. It concerns 3 generations of a family who have links to the last king of Burma, and takes place in Burma and India. It is undoubtedly a well researched and well written book. There just didn't seem to be enough feeling in it, I didn't sympathise with any of the characters and found I didn't really care about them. Perhaps it was just the subject matter......
Absorbing March 9, 2005 5 out of 6 found this review helpful
Not a completely flawless book: some episodes seem unattached to the main story, and the very last few pages require a knowledge of post-war Burmese history which is not easy to deduce from the text. But this is a book which wonderfully creates a world - especially Burma and Malaya - of which most readers will know very little. It is a story of three families across three generations of interesting personalities; complex, sometimes strange, often moving. Politics throughout the 20th century impinges on them, and especially interesting is the position of men who had joined the Indian regiments of the British Army and who came to see themselves as mercenaries who held down the Burmese and were used to fight for a British cause against the Japanese. The horrors of the Japanese invasions of Malaya and Burma are also hauntingly described.
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