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Day of the Scorpion (Revised)
Day of the Scorpion (Revised) | Paul Scott
5 posts | 5 read | 1 reading | 1 to read
The arrest by British police of ex-Chief Minister Mohammed Ali Kasim, who is known to sympathise with the Quite India movement, signifies a further deterioration in Anglo-Indian relations. For families such as the Laytons, who have lived and served in India for generations, the immediate social and political realities are both disturbing and tragic. With growing confusion and bewilderment, the British are forced to confront the violent and often brutal years that lie ahead of them.
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ponyflorist
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Pickpick

Second installment.. I like it better than the first.. expands upon what came to pass in first book. Author still hell bent on anacondaesque sentences.. but it's a gymnastic reading pleasure to follow these from nose to tail 😁 one thing tho.. the bits about Indian people are dismissed quickly.. it's all about the whites. I suppose that's the point tho? Tally ho chaps! Onto the third installment!!

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Severnmeadows
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I have always loved these books, loved just as much the tv dramatisation The Jewel in the Crown. I‘ve recently been enjoying rereading a few chapters.😊

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Clare26

I read the first novel in ‘The Raj Quartet‘ (‘The Jewel in the Crown‘) last month and loved the way the author used different perspectives on an event. Now for the second volume.

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