![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() As headstrong Satya, more involved in her husband's affairs than most of her peers, and demure Roop, trained to exercise traditional feminine wiles, battle for Sardarji's favor and the children Roop soon produces, Sardarji is increasingly distracted by the furor over independence and the future of the Indian state. Baldwin, who grew up in India, skillfully creates an exotic milieu where women are sheltered from the outside world and struggle for influence over their families. Intensely atmospheric, the novel contains lyrical descriptions of daily life in a village with dusty fields of maize and clusters of homes the cinnamon, anise and fennel smell of Satya's kitchen Sardarji's Oxfordian attire and his spindly-legged English furniture. The dramatic and brutal story behind the 1947 partition of India, as played out in the region of Punjab, is the compelling backdrop for this stunning first novel that entwines the fate of three remarkable characters: Sardarji, a wealthy Sikh landowner whose heart is in India, but whose head is in England Satya, his constantly scheming, feisty wife who lives for her husband but cannot give him children and Roop, Sardarji's second, much younger wife, married for the express purpose of providing the family with an heir. ![]()
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