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The Jam Fruit Tree
The Jam Fruit Tree | Carl Muller
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Winner Of The Gratiean Memorial Prize For The Best Work In English Literature By A Sri Lankan For 1993 Hilarious, Affectionate, Candid And Moving, This Is The Story Of The Burghers Of Sri Lanka& Who Are The Burghers? Descended From The Dutch, The Portuguese, The British And Other Foreigners Who Arrived In The Island-Nation Of Sri Lanka (And Mingled With The Local Inhabitants), The Burghers Often Stand Out Because Of Their Curiously Mixed Features-Grey Eyes In An Otherwise Dravid Face, For Instance.... A Handsome And Guileless People, The Burghers Have Always Lived It Up, Forever Willing To Put A Party . Carl Muller, A Burgher Himself, Writes In This Quasi-Fictional, Engaging Biography Of The Lives Of His People; They Emerge, At The End Of His Story, As A Race Of Fun-Loving, Hardy People, Much Like The Jam Fruit Tree Which Simply Refuses To Be Contained Or Destroyed.
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The Jam Fruit Tree | Carl Muller
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This part-fiction part-memoir drew me into the sticky sweet mess that was the life of the Sri Lankan Burghers, quite like the fruit from the tree that surveys their upheavals of joy, sorrow and victories. Be transported to a bygone era and come out of the final page immersed in the antiquities of a unique people. Illustration by Aart-Jan Venema of Geoffrey Bawa, a Burgher and a pioneering Architect.