From the Bookshelf of The Roundtable

A Passage to India
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Start date
September 1, 2016
Finish date
September 30, 2016
Discussion
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By Lauren · 43 posts · 28 views
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This topic has been closed to new comments. Impromptu "light" fiction read to close out 2018
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last updated Nov 13, 2018 08:12AM
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What Members Thought

El
I'm not sure why I chose this book as my first Forster experience, but it certainly delivered.

The story takes place in fictional Chandrapore in India during the British colonial invasion. Adela Quested and Mrs. Moore are both British visitors who desire a more hands-on experience in India. This curiosity and eagerness changed their lives forever. Fielding is a British headmaster at a government run Indian college who has befriended Indian Dr. Aziz. Aziz takes it upon himself to show the ladies a
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Wendy
Not what I expected. Better. The sequence at the Marabar Caves struck me as eerily similar to the hallucinatory Picnic at Hanging Rock (my favorite read from last year) -- what is it about wild, rocky terrain that inspires a kind of madness in us? The characters' actions may be hard to follow logically, but there's an emotional truthfulness that's hard for me to articulate. This story of culture clash starts off deceivingly small -- a chance meeting at a mosque, a polo practice, an awkward party ...more
Pamela
Adela Quested arrives in India with Mrs Moore -Adela is considering marriage to Mrs Moore's son Ronnie. Both are struck by the contrasts between life back in England and that led by the Anglo Indian community. They are befriended by the Muslim doctor Aziz who offers to show them the Marabar caves. It is there that a strange incident occurs, bringing the conflict between the British and the Indian inhabitants into the open, and shattering many illusions.

Forster skilfully shows the tension seethin
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Lori
Generally a very good book in the style Forster is famous for. He's great at showing the Anglo-Indians and surprisingly good at the few Hindus but his depiction of the Muslims is just a bit off. His Muslim characters generally think only of the moment, which is a bit too reminiscent of the happy-go-lucky native for me. Otherwise an insightful depiction of a complicated society and, of course, a very good story. ...more
Alasse
I bought this one out of desperation because "A Thousand Splendid Suns" was lasting way less than it was supposed to. (Note to self: do not travel without my ebook. ever. again.)

Now I need to figure out where to fit this into the challenge or it's going to bug me so much I'm going to end up hating it. Not the mindset you want to be in when diving into a new book right? #neurotic #endwhine
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Jenny
“Only connect!” That is the advise Forster gives in Howard’s End but in A Passage to India he creates a world where there are no connections.
- from Roger Ebert’s review of the movie version

It seems Forster’s experience during the Great War which intruded between the writing of each book made him question whether our modern world was capable of true human connections.
Sera
This book provides a nice social commentary on Indian-English relations during England's occupied rule of India. However, the story was much too slow in my opinion. I can tell that this was Forster's last work. I'm glad that I gave him a try, but it will be awhile before I read him again. ...more
Rosana
Jan 06, 2008 rated it it was amazing
Shelves: 2007, classic
Genia Lukin
Mar 19, 2011 rated it did not like it
Kai Coates
Jun 11, 2013 rated it really liked it
Natalie Tyler
Nov 01, 2014 rated it it was amazing
Nidhi Kumari
Feb 26, 2015 rated it liked it
Liz M
Dec 26, 2015 marked it as own  ·  review of another edition
Shelves: __read
Kathy Chumley
Feb 22, 2016 rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
Jen
Oct 02, 2016 rated it liked it
Dianne
Sep 18, 2016 rated it really liked it
Joey Anderson
Oct 08, 2016 rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
Dawn
Jul 18, 2019 rated it it was ok  ·  review of another edition
Shelves: classics, audiobook
Henk
Feb 14, 2018 marked it as to-read
Joe
Apr 29, 2020 rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
Friederike
Feb 21, 2021 marked it as to-read
Bepina Vragec
Aug 02, 2023 marked it as want-to-read-someday-fic  ·  review of another edition
Shelves: softcopy
Sarah
Jan 02, 2024 marked it as to-read