Retro Reads discussion
M.M. Kaye - Fiction
>
Shadows of the Moon Book 1 (Chapters 1-6)
message 1:
by
Tadiana ✩Night Owl☽
(new)
Jul 27, 2015 01:57PM

reply
|
flag
I had to keep flipping back to the family tree through this section. lol I'm in that dog-days of summer mood where nothing much sticks in my brain. But the family is interesting. I can't believe what Lord War did at the end of Book 1!
Who has been taking care of the estates in India meanwhile? And this is a bit of a picky comment, but I would have thought that, just out of self interest, the family would have treated Winter better and even betrothed her to Huntley to keep the money in the family. Ah, but then it would have been a different book...
Who has been taking care of the estates in India meanwhile? And this is a bit of a picky comment, but I would have thought that, just out of self interest, the family would have treated Winter better and even betrothed her to Huntley to keep the money in the family. Ah, but then it would have been a different book...


Very, very slight spoiler there.
I figured as much, Misfit. The intermarriage is very much the sort of thing that happened in the early days of European trading in India. White Mughals: Love and Betrayal in Eighteenth-Century India was a great non-fiction book on the subject.

That book has flitted around on my maybe read list for years.

Hana, that is a good point about a match for Winter with one of her Grantham cousins--that was done in the past for the exact reasons you have given.
I don't understand why Marco wanted (view spoiler)
I'm going tho have to come back and read Misfit's comment bec I have Ch 5-6 to read but I just wanted to say I am enjoying my first exp with MM Kaye!

I completely agree, Samanta! Andrea, you're right, too. There are some plot holes and odd goings on in the early part of the story (including Marcos' incomprehensible behavior!) but I'm just going to roll with it. I figure Kaye is just moving everyone around to get the main characters where she needs them. Still....

I feel exactly the same about Marcos!




Hi Kathy! I hope you enjoy it. I'm liking it-my first -time read ogf MM Kaye.

My take is that since everyone was cruel to hat except her grandfather and her nurse died, the memory and promised marriage was all that she had to cling to. It probably IMO would have been traumatic to try to think about what in the world she'd do w/o both grandfather and Conway.
Poor, poor Winter!

I can't help but wonder why that dastardly Marcos didn't have her sent to Spain on his death instead.


I agree that Marcos' conduct was selfish, but M. M. Kaye likes her couples very Romeo-and-Juliety: the "the world is well lost for love" and "I can't live without you" type of love. To me, one of the plot developments that didn't ring completely true was Winter's engagement to Conway by her grandfather. This was the man who turned up his nose at the titled, extremely wealthy Conde as a match for his beloved Sabrina. Now he's satisfied with a plain Mr., one with only slight connections to nobility and no fortune--a man who actually has to work for a living--for the great-granddaughter of an English earl, descended from both French and Spanish nobility, who possesses a title and huge fortune in her own right? Yes, he was getting old but was not senile. It seems that even if he were favorably impressed by Conway, he would still consider it as a very poor match for Winter's station. It seems more likely that he would have borrowed Julia's list and picked one of those guys to betroth her to. Then he could be sure that she would stay in merry old England and still make an advantageous marriage instead of a mésalliance.
But oh, how beautifully M. M. Kaye can craft a sentence! They flow as smoothly as satin.

It just seemed that when Sabrina decided that her (girl) child should go to her grandfather, she forgot the less than favorable treatment she received by her female family members and that Winter as a girl, would fall into their hands.
I agree that it seemed out of the Earl's character to contract Winter to Conway for all of the reasons that you gave.


Yes, he wasn't senile, but he was very old and I think he had convinced himself that Conway was a prize. And Conway also would take Winter away from the relatives who would be in charge of her after his death and who had no love for her at all. At this point in the story, too, Conway was good-looking and plausible. He certainly took in both Winter and her great-grandfather!

I'm not sure this was a good pick for summer reading; I may head over to an Austen after this for some cool Englishness. The heat here and the heat in India are frying my brains.


We also have to take into account that the Granthams considered de Ballesteros as foreigners because they lived in India and Juanita was born there and married and Indian. Also the English did not hold the Spanish in high regard (in terms of being their equals) no matter the title and despite being Europeans and a very old nation.

I'm in the notorious inland Northwest- where "It's 104, but that's ok, because there's no humidity" gets said a lot. And it's still 104!

Only hitting the mid seventies today. Overnight temps might lower into the 50s.


Excellent sleeping temps with open windows, I'm jealous. :)

No, there are parts of this novel that do slog along, but the last third - watch out.

I found some parts a bit dry too, but I made myself read them because it's a good history lesson. I had more trouble with some parts in book two. I almost skipped 10 pages, but decided to read it after all.

Good point, Samanta, that the English weren't crazy about Spaniards. After all, they'd been enemies for centuries!
(And that reminded me of the scene in The Princess Bride where Inigo Montoya offers the man in black his hand on the word of a Spaniard. He declines with, "No, thanks, I've known too many Spaniards.")
Cindy wrote: "M. M. Kaye likes her couples very Romeo-and-Juliety: the "the world is well lost for love" and "I can't live without you" type of love. To me, one of the plot developments that didn't ring completely true was Winter's engagement to Conway by her grandfather...."
Yes, exactly Cindy! I'm kind of going with it but what her grandfather should, and probably would have done in the real world, is appoint an estate executor and a legal and accountancy firm skilled in dealing with international properties that would be prepared to aide the young heiress in managing her life. By Victorian times such skills were not uncommon.
International marriage politics was also hardly unknown to the British upper classes. The logical thing for the family to do was to auction poor Winter off to the highest bidder. They could easily have overturned granddaddy's wishes and they had--had they banded together--every incentive to do so. Think of the opportunities for nepotistic appointments! The estates to be purchased! The investment opportunities! Yes, they have money and estates, but that's rarely a cure for desiring more money.
Yes, exactly Cindy! I'm kind of going with it but what her grandfather should, and probably would have done in the real world, is appoint an estate executor and a legal and accountancy firm skilled in dealing with international properties that would be prepared to aide the young heiress in managing her life. By Victorian times such skills were not uncommon.
International marriage politics was also hardly unknown to the British upper classes. The logical thing for the family to do was to auction poor Winter off to the highest bidder. They could easily have overturned granddaddy's wishes and they had--had they banded together--every incentive to do so. Think of the opportunities for nepotistic appointments! The estates to be purchased! The investment opportunities! Yes, they have money and estates, but that's rarely a cure for desiring more money.

Excellent sleeping temps with open windows, I'm jealous. :)"
I'd rather see 40s or 30s. It's been a looooooooooooooooooong stretch of hot with no AC in the house.

I didn't have as much trouble with those parts as I did with the violence in the later pages. Definitely had to read with squinty eyes.

I assume everyone knows this covers the Sepoy Mutiny, but not sure how familiar everyone is with the details. They are pretty brutal, so prepare yourselves.

I assume everyone knows this covers the Sepoy Mutiny, but not sure how ..."
Right, Misfit! I think that all the pre-history is pretty much necessary to the events that are coming up. It's hard to understand even with the background; without it, it'd be impossible.

I don't mind those parts too much, Tadiana. We have to have the background in order to understand the plot, and she doesn't present it like a history book--"This person did this. Then this happened. As a result, blah blah blah." She interjects her own viewpoint bolstered by the 20/20 vision of hindsight. She explains how stupid the actions of those in charge were, and exactly how these actions were viewed by the native population and the clearer-headed members of the British army. Seeing the events from the perspective of the Indians, and hearing of the struggles of those few men who understood the perils of the situation really helps build that impending sense of doom.

One of these days I'm going to get her memoirs out from the library and read them. I hear the elephant scene from The Far Pavilions was inspired by real life events.


I knew none of that! Thanks for the link, Misfit. I hadn't even realized that Shadow of the Moon was pre-Far Pavilions. My ignorance humbles me...

I liked that part ok. I didn't mind it. I'm interested in Britsh in India stuff--The Raj. If we were reading about politics in some other country, perhaps not so much.


Yes.

Samanta wrote: "Tadiana ✩ Night Owl☽ wrote: "I found some parts of Book 1, where Kaye was summarizing the historical political dealings and turmoil in India, tough slogging. I tended to skim those parts. Is it jus..."


Added that to my TBR list -- of course I will probably die before I finish that list. LOL