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355 pages, Hardcover
First published March 3, 2015
"Some people are so impoverished all they have is gold. We, however, have pride.
My first Moran book was Nefertiti and I liked it so much that I told myself I'd read more of her works. I learned so much from this book, which is what I usually expect after reading a historical fiction book but may not always happen. This novel introduced me to something called the Durga Dal, which is the name for the queen of India's (rani) elite all-female personal guard. I was absolutely floored by this. I hope to learn more about it through other books and articles. As for the actual plot, the narrator is Sita, a woman who is part of the Durga Dal, and she serves as the reader's eyes and ears and, what's more, heart. Through her my own frustration and even intense dislike of the British as they unfairly took over India and used the ranito suit their own purposes when it was convenient for them grew. I doubt anyone who reads this book will come to the end and still maintain an intense fondness for the British monarchy. What I most enjoyed, however, was how the book is full of multidimensional characters, multidimensional women in a place of high position, not saying, "Look at me, I am a strong female figure," but rather simply saying, "I am."
I won’t describe for you the bloodshed and cruelty I saw that day. I don’t wish to remember it, and I don’t like to accept that I am capable of the acts I committed. (339)What?! No. Bad author. Why are you even writing the book, then?
“Some men simply have no interest in women.”I don’t know the general Indian attitude towards homosexuality, then or now, but I doubt girls raised in conservative families like Sita and her friend would be so understanding and even
“But is this only in Jhansi?”
[…] “Sita don’t tell me you think this is unique to Jhansi. This has existed since the beginning of time. The raja was born this way, the same way you were born with an interest in men.” (195)
[W]hat woman has ever changed her husband’s fate by joining him on his pyre? And what woman has ever built a stronger kingdom by disappearing from it? Our ancestors believed that committing sati was an act of courage. I say that with the exception of the goddess Sati, who after all, is immortal, it is an act of cowardice! Who will raise her children, or care for her parents, or tend her garden? No. If I die, it will be by the sword, not by the flame! (214)If only her character had been that badass throughout the novel. sigh