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The Far Pavilions
M.M. Kaye - Fiction
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The Far Pavilions Resources. Spoiler Warning!!
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Hana, Hana is In Absentia
(last edited Jul 16, 2014 12:01AM)
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Jul 15, 2014 03:08PM

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A very helpful, largely spoiler-free web site with background info and great photos.
http://www.purrlions.net/ash/india_un...
http://www.purrlions.net/ash/india_un...
This is a history of the The Honorable East India Company, colloquially named John Company, with a useful timeline of governors and events:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Company_...
Here's a link to my India folder with some excellent books, some read, some TBRs: https://www.goodreads.com/review/list...
This is a link to the Wikipedia article on the Indian Rebellion of 1857 in which Siti and Ash find themselves caught after the cholera kills Professor Hilary in Book 1: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indian_R...

The Sepoy Rebellion can be found in MM Kaye's Shadow of the Moon and Valerie Fitzgerald's Zemindar. Those two complement each other well, Kaye's characters are outside of the Lucknow Residency and Fitzgerald's are inside.

The Sepoy Rebelli..."
Misfit, did you also get the impression that (view spoiler) And also that (view spoiler)


Yes, he was! If only he'd gotten a better companion...
*grumbles*

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Hana, Hana is In Absentia
(last edited Jul 20, 2014 10:09AM)
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Clear your social calendar, Kathy, and forget about all such mundane chores as laundry and bills. I read all day yesterday--I could not put Far Pavilions down! It is interesting to be reading it at the same time as The Day of the Scorpion. Far Pavilions is set some seventy years earlier and the lines between races and religions had only just begun to harden.
I read White Mughals: Love and Betrayal in Eighteenth-Century India a few months ago; it's set earlier still, in the eighteen century during British East India company's days when there was much more open social mixing and intermarriage. All three books point to the arrival of the memsahibs (the English ladies) and the resulting segregation of British subjects into cantonments as a factor in widening divisions.
I read White Mughals: Love and Betrayal in Eighteenth-Century India a few months ago; it's set earlier still, in the eighteen century during British East India company's days when there was much more open social mixing and intermarriage. All three books point to the arrival of the memsahibs (the English ladies) and the resulting segregation of British subjects into cantonments as a factor in widening divisions.

I did the same thing, but I'm now re-reading it and discovering so much more by going a tad more slowly, pacing myself to the HBC threads :)

That's what you get for going on vacation, Kathy! :D I got a little sidetracked by Wildfire at Midnight for a day or two and now I'm playing catch-up myself.


You young whipper snappers probably weren't born yet :p

I always figured I had you beat with the age thing. Since the book was written in '78 and the miniseries was in '84 (I just checked), long after I was born, I'm afraid I'll have to blame my ignorance on obliviousness rather than my youth. :)

I always figured I had you beat with the age thing. Since the book was written in '78 and the miniseries was in '84 (I just ..."
:)
I finished watching last night. Even if you ladies don't take the time to watch the whole thing, but bits in Bithor and the wedding plus ---->>>>huge spoiler (view spoiler) are well worth watching.
Interesting how the mini series ended up, they skipped quite a bit and I'm sure the battle at the residency was at the end of the book ((view spoiler) ).

Once you get there, you should know exactly what I'm talking about.


Spoiler #1, I thought it was just as intense as it was in the book. I was riveted.
Spoiler #2, (view spoiler) . I could be wrong though.
Ram ram. (view spoiler)
That was soooooooooooooo intense.

You are correct (view spoiler) .


OK, I'm not losing my mind (yet). Just get over Amy Irving and enjoy the rest of it. What they must have gone through to film that. The wedding party alone with all those actors, plus the elephants. Wow.

Sorry, I will stop. What is behind those tags really isn't enough to spoil, more hints than anything.


Hurry up and read.

I've watched part of the movie and enjoyed it, mostly for the sets and music plus the actions kind of speak for themselves, but gosh subtitles would be nice.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0346457/?...
and on youtube this is part 1
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S3LsE...
That's so interesting about Ash's nickname. I just checked my Netflix account and they have the Rising in DVD format and it lists English as one of several languages subtitled :) I just added it to the top of my queue.
Just watched part 1--even without subtitles it's pretty terrific. I'm looking forward to getting the DVD.

I loved the song and the painted elephant was wonderful!
Do you have any idea why he was pardoned and at the last minute that way?
Do you have any idea why he was pardoned and at the last minute that way?

Pardoned? I don't think he was pardoned.
The guy on the scaffold was Pandey?. Did they just postpone the hanging, then?
Ugh...it would seem so...http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mangal_P...
Ugh...it would seem so...http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mangal_P...

I see you read up on Panday and I assume you saw that he was executed. And fairly quickly after the mutiny IIRC.
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Hana, Hana is In Absentia
(last edited Aug 06, 2014 07:44AM)
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Here's another very helpful resource: a full chronology of the Second Afghan War. You can click through on the links at left to read more. The pictures and maps are wonderful! http://www.garenewing.co.uk/angloafgh...
Most of the major British characters and quite a few of the minor ones have portraits and they are wonderful, but beware of spoilers!
Most of the major British characters and quite a few of the minor ones have portraits and they are wonderful, but beware of spoilers!
Love those pix, Tadiana! Kabul really does have a certain grim beauty and Wally is so handsome in that picture.
message 48:
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Hana, Hana is In Absentia
(last edited Aug 18, 2014 03:56PM)
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Enjoy it and I would love to hear your thoughts about the always tricky book-movie transition. I'm no purist: some of the movie transitions seriously improve the books (Bleak House). Yet some are near disasters or at least real disappointments. (I have mixed to negative feelings about the whole Harry Potter film adaptation. I could go on...Sigh. I promise I will spare you the line by line/scene by scene critique :D)

I been offline pretty much since September. Very busy with the end of fy 2018 and the beginning of fy 2019. I have a terrible backlog of pm’s and notifications.
I don’t want to miss the buddy reread of Far Pavilions. Is it still on?
Andrea (Catsos Person) is a Compulsive eBook Hoarder wrote: "Hello Hana and group!
I been offline pretty much since September. Very busy with the end of fy 2018 and the beginning of fy 2019. I have a terrible backlog of pm’s and notifications.
I don’t want..."
Hi Andrea!
I think it will be, but Hana is sick ATM. :(
I been offline pretty much since September. Very busy with the end of fy 2018 and the beginning of fy 2019. I have a terrible backlog of pm’s and notifications.
I don’t want..."
Hi Andrea!
I think it will be, but Hana is sick ATM. :(
Books mentioned in this topic
Bleak House (other topics)Wildfire at Midnight (other topics)
The Day of the Scorpion (other topics)
The Day of the Scorpion (other topics)
White Mughals: Love and Betrayal in Eighteenth-Century India (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Mary Stewart (other topics)Mary Stewart (other topics)