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| The Nizam's Daughters | 
enlarge | Author: Allan Mallinson Publisher: Bantam Books Category: Book
List Price: £7.99 Buy Used: £0.01 You Save: £7.98 (100%)
New (23) from £3.02
Avg. Customer Rating: 3 reviews Sales Rank: 41008
Media: Paperback Edition: New edition Pages: 544 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.6 Dimensions (in): 7.6 x 5 x 1.1
ISBN: 0553507141 Dewey Decimal Number: 813 EAN: 9780553507140 ASIN: 0553507141
Publication Date: April 6, 2001 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.co.uk Review Historical fiction is enjoying a new golden age at present, with ever more impressive military heroes joining the ranks. Alan Mallinson, author of The Nizam's Daughters and a serving cavalry officer, has already achieved considerable praise for his brand of derring-do in his first novel A Close Run Thing, which is generally acclaimed as a debut of real excitement and verve. With The Nizam's Daughters, the author has overcome the second hurdle with equal aplomb. In Mallinson's second novel, Matthew Hervey of the Light Dragoons, fresh from the Battle of Waterloo, is newly appointed as aide de camp to the Duke of Wellington. Hervey is sent on a clandestine mission to India (leaving behind his fiancee Henrietta) to travel to an alien land seething with intrigue. At the princely state of Chintal, Hervey undertakes his mission: to discover the intelligence that will allow the Duke to forge lasting alliances if (as he expects) he becomes Governor General of India. Needless to say, Hervey soon finds himself way out of his depth, as Chintal is a city threatened from all sides. The massing forces of the Nizam of Haidarabad, whose expansionist policies are backed up by the eponymous Nizam's Daughters, a legendary artillery brigade provide the most sinister menace. Mallinson has studied the masters of the historical adventure genre well, and is particularly adroit at creating the dangerous and dirty reality of the soldier's lot. The author's experience of horseborne warfare serves him well in pitching the reader into the heart of the battles fought by his beleaguered hero. There are those who may fear that the author's military credentials may be the reason he has been commissioned to write these books rather than any storytelling skills but even a cursory glance at the first chapter should abuse anyone of that idea. Mallinson is a genuine storyteller, with a gift for the striking image: Another volley came, felling two more. Hervey sprang up and rushed to one of them, lifting him across his shoulder and taking up his musket in his free hand. Peto did the same as another welter of musket balls assailed them. One struck the silver pouch of Hervey's crossbelt, and with such force that he was knocked clean to the ground. Peto, having dropped his man in a doorway, dashed to him, but he was already on his hands and knees retching with the pain and gasping for the air that had been knocked out of him. And still the firing continued... --Barry Forshaw
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| Customer Reviews:
Mediocre 'boys own' military adventure November 19, 2002 3 out of 14 found this review helpful
This is the second installment of the Matthew Hervey of the Light Dragoons sequence and I think, the last that I will trouble myself to read. The main character is simply a one dimensional foil, too good to be true and despite all the odds, always seems to get the job done without smudging his reputation or compromising his closely held morals. I'm sure the historical detail is accurate, but frankly I'd prefer to read about the real heroes of the period...(for which I recommend Soldiers and Sahibs). Even against his fictional contemporaries, Mallinsons hero falls short of the mark. Sharpe (though equally a 'superhero') has at least some darkness to his character, while Flashman stands head and shoulders above in terms of depth and wit.
Excellent Book August 8, 2001 9 out of 11 found this review helpful
It took a while to get into the first book (a close run thing) but this one is excellent in every way. The scene setting brings you into the heart of india and gives an excellent account of what life might have been like in the 1800's. A must for any fan of historical fiction.
A great follow-up to "A CLOSE RUN THING" June 8, 2000 12 out of 13 found this review helpful
This, the latest of the Matthew Hervey novels is a masterful follow-up to 'A Close Run Thing' and although it is a great story in its own right I advise reading the first novel prior to this one. I learned a lot about 19th century India from the book which I am certain is as well researched and factually correct (as far as a work of fiction can be) as Mallinson's first book. The military detail is again superb. The English is a delight, Mallinson brings to life again words which are seldom heard or seem in print today, and these in a prose style which is a joy and makes one eager for the next episode. Although, as with his first novel, there are frequent biblical references, in this story they do enhance the plot, and given the era, are this time more believable of the hero. There is one masterfully written and sensuous scene concerning the Raj Kumari, Hervey and a pair of Cobras which cannot fail to quicken the pulse! I await the next installment with eager anticipation
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