Product Details
East of the Sun

East of the Sun
By Julia Gregson

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Product Description

An utterly captivating story of three young British women in search of freedom and love in 1920s India

Synopsis

Autumn 1928. Three young women are on their way to India, each with a new life in mind. Rose, a beautiful but naïve bride-to-be, is anxious about leaving her family and marrying a man she hardly knows. Victoria, her bridesmaid couldn t be happier to get away from her overbearing mother, and is determined to find herself a husband. And Viva, their inexperienced chaperone, is in search of the India of her childhood, ghosts from the past and freedom. Each of them has their own reason for leaving their homeland but the hopes and secrets they carry can do little to prepare them for what lies ahead in India.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #181 in Books
  • Published on: 2008-06-12
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 464 pages

Editorial Reviews

Review
"a rich historical novel...a taut, never predictable plot" (audio edition) SUNDAY TIMES "The Orion staff gave this beautifully written book an overwhelming thumbs up, and it isn't hard to see why" COUNTRY LIFE "a finely written story full of characters you can care about...highly descriptive and persuasively told" THE LADY "a unique and fascinating historical novel" PRIMA "this novel is utterly engaging" ASIAN AGE

Review
"a rich historical novel...a taut, never predictable plot" (audio edition) (SUNDAY TIMES )

"The Orion staff gave this beautifully written book an overwhelming thumbs up, and it isn't hard to see why" (COUNTRY LIFE )

"a finely written story full of characters you can care about...highly descriptive and persuasively told" (THE LADY )

"a unique and fascinating historical novel" (PRIMA )

"this novel is utterly engaging" (ASIAN AGE )

Synopsis
Autumn 1928. Three young women are on their way to India, each with a new life in mind. Rose, a beautiful but naive bride-to-be, is anxious about leaving her family and marrying a man she hardly knows. Victoria, her bridesmaid couldn t be happier to get away from her overbearing mother, and is determined to find herself a husband. And Viva, their inexperienced chaperone, is in search of the India of her childhood, ghosts from the past and freedom. Each of them has their own reason for leaving their homeland but the hopes and secrets they carry can do little to prepare them for what lies ahead in India. From the parties of the wealthy Bombay socialites, to the ragged orphans on Tamarind Street, EAST OF THE SUN is an utterly engaging novel that will captivate readers everywhere.


Customer Reviews

Pleasant but not exceptional3
This is the story of three women venturing to India in the 1920s, each with her own hopes and dreams, her own fears. While it is pleasant enough - ideal as a holiday read perhaps - it hardly excites or lingers in the memory. The writing is sufficiently fluid not to jar, but there is little to entice the reader back to seek deeper insight, nothing particularly thought-provoking, no phrase or paragraph so poetic that it must be read and re-read for the sheer pleasure of the language.

Nineteen-year-old Rose is travelling to India to marry Jack Chandler, an army officer she barely knew before he proposed and whose regiment sailed to India shortly after their engagement. By the time Rose approaches Bombay she can hardly remember what he was like and is nervous of meeting him again. Her best friend Tor (unusually, short for Victoria), who cannot wait to be free of her overbearing mother, is to be Rose's bridesmaid and hopes to find a husband of her own. Viva, the young woman employed as their chaperone, has her own hang-ups about India where she lived as a child before losing both her parents and her sister.

Overall, the story is interesting if somewhat bland and there are sections missing that cry out to be told. One such is Rose's wedding. The voyage to India, which dominates the early chapters, is a build-up to the forthcoming marriage, full of Rose's fears and feelings, with a couple of chapters on Jack's perceptions. But the wedding itself is passed over in the briefest description from Tor's viewpoint, without our ever knowing how the bride herself viewed the day.

Of the girls' stories, it was Viva's that came most alive and was most fully developed. Tor's story achieved a satisfying roundness, but Rose's seemed to fizzle out as if unfinished, leaving questions unanswered. There were hints but nothing more. Maybe this was deliberate, but for me it left a sense of incompleteness, as if the author had forgotten to add the finishing touches to Rose's viewpoint.

For all that the book is enjoyable, so long as you treat it as a light read and don't expect too much. Recommended for holiday or bedtime reading, or whenever you don't want to be too challenged!

Very disappointed1
Considering this book is a Richard & Judy's recommended summer read I am extremely disappointed. While the story line appears to be quite good the writing is stilted and awkward. How can you take a book seriously, and carry on reading it, when a sentence reads "She'd slammed the door and left the room". (page 75, second para.)
The description of male genitalia at the top of page 79 is clumsy and ridiculous and the explanation of Tor's father stemming her 'monthlies' with some old rags and his regimental tie is laughable (bottom of page 121).
How this book can be included in the same list as 'Mr. Pip' is beyond my understanding. The proof reader needs to be fired. I should have been warned by the fact there are no excerpts from reviews anywhere in the book.
I'm sorry Ms Gregson, but I cannot waste my time finishing it when there are so many good books waiting to be read.

An enchanting book about an enchanting country.5
I just had to give this book 5 stars, I loved every single page.

I was able to connect with and understand the thoughts and feelings of all three main characters, Rose, Tor and Viva.

Rose is 19 years old and travelling to India to marry a man she has met only a handful of times.
Tor, Rose's bridesmaid is an enthuastic member of the "Fishing Fleet" hoping to bag herself a handsome husband.
Viva is Rose and Tor's mysterious chaperone, on a journey of her own to return the country she was born in and left at just 10 years old and to discover the whereabouts of a trunk that once belonged to her dead parents.

For me, this book gave me a wonderful insight to life in colonial India, from the upper class English waited on hand and foot, to the "untouchable" beggars on the streets. I felt the heat of the sun, tasted the spice in the air and saw the multicolurs of the streets and people.

This book is beautiful journey of self discovery and enlightenment and I would reccommend it to anyone.

After reading some of the negative reviews I have to say, remember this is a fictional story, it doesn't have to be 100% accurate.

I hope you read it and love it, as I did and if you've been to India, I hope it will stir up some fond memories. If you've never been to India, I hope it will inspire you to go.