Title: Zemindar

Edition: Bantam Books (paperback), 1983
Setting: 1857 India
Genre: Historical Fiction
Valerie Fitzgerald wrote only one book.
But what a book it is. Don't be deceived by the paperback's romance novel
cover: “Zemindar” is historical fiction at its finest.
Set in India at the time of the Sepoy
Mutiny (also referred to as the Indian Rebellion or the First War of
Indian Independence) in 1857, this is the story of an English
spinster and poor relation, Laura Hewitt, who accompanies her
newly-married cousin Emily and Emily's husband, Charles, on a
honeymoon trip to India. It seems that Charles is related to a
zemindar, a wealthy landowner in India named Oliver Erskine and since
Mr. Erskine is childless, hopes to be named his heir. The
relationship between these four people is complicated: Laura believes
herself to be in love with Charles, Charles' and Emily's marriage is
unhappy, and Oliver Erskine? Well, he's enigmatic. Slowly, Laura
finds herself less and less enamored of Charles and more interested
in Oliver.
It is during the honeymoon stay at
Erskine's estate that the Mutiny breaks out. They escape to the
Residency at Lucknow and join the many who are beseiged there. The
hardships, fear, brutality and death during the Mutiny change each of
Fitzgerald's characters. And they are superb characters: besides
the four main characters who run the gamut from spoiled and shallow
to strong and colorful, she gives us Toddy Bob, Oliver's Cockney
servant; Kate, a tough but kind wife of an army officer; Moti,
Oliver's Indian mistress, and many other vivid characters.
The author's grandmother lived through
the Mutiny and that the author lived in Lucknow during WWII; her
description of India (Erskine's estate, Hassanganj, and the Residency
at Lucknow in particular) is superb, filled with detail that is
included not for the sake of showing us how much research she has
done, but to illuminate her story.
This is a sweeping, vivid book that
reaches a deeply satisfying conclusion. It's long (almost 800
pages), so set aside some time to enjoy this superb novel, which has only recently been made available as a Kindle book.
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