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Day of the Scorpion
 
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Day of the Scorpion (Paperback)

de Paul Scott (Author)
5.0étoiles sur 5  Voir tous les commentaires (2 évaluations de client)

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Review

Following Scott's The Jewel in the Crown (1966) this rich, elaborately terraced novel utilizes some characters and situations from the earlier book, and is again set in India during World War II, the years when the firm imperial ground of the British conquerors had eroded to irrelevance. This novel has to do with prisoners, in jails and in the dreadful trap of carefully sanctioned social and civic illusion. Among the Indian prisoners incarcerated: Kasim, playing the "old man's game" of political rebellion; his son Ahmed, "incoherent" before his father's belief; young Kumar, victim of the British Merrick, who struck through to what Merrick felt were the validities of hatred and violence, the sure expedience beyond officer-caste idealism. But the English women are more truly prisoners as the Empire withers, and the Layton women, representatives of a ruling "career" family, are chilled by the ripples of the first portentous stone thrown. Mrs. Layton, deprived of her husband, a prisoner of war, is a budding alcoholic; Susan, lovely, frail, is driven to withdrawal as her raison d'etre is destroyed by the death of her husband; Sarah, who like Ahmed cannot accept the deceptions of a world of conqueror and conquered, yet is "beholden" to those she respects and loves. What is a non-political rebellion, or, given love, is it desirable? The scorpion in a ring of fire might have defied the inevitable or caused his own death. Perhaps it is Scott's tendency to settle in with his characters until he over-intellectualizes, or his habit of slicing his narrative arbitrarily, that diminishes his considerable stature. But his view of the crippling illusionary quests of men and nations, his ability to recreate a culture and a time, continue to mark him as a novelist of importance. (Kirkus Reviews)


Product Description

The second novel of a quartet which began with "The Jewel in the Crown". The detainment of a former Chief Minister is the first of wholesale arrests of influential Indians suspected of anti-British sympathies. For families such as the Laytons, the social and political realities are disturbing.

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2 évaluations
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5.0étoiles sur 5 Intoducing Scorpio......, Avril 28 2001
Par Dianne Foster "Di" (USA) - Voir tous mes commentaires
(TOP 100 REVIEWER)   
THE DAY OF THE SCORPION continues Paul Scott's very long story (total of 2000 pages) of the last days of British colonial rule in India. SCORPION is book 2 in the so-called Raj Quartet. These books are not about the external events per se as much as they are about the effects of these external events on the lives of several individuals, most prominently, Hari Kumar, Sarah Layton, and later in book 4 Guy Perron. In SCORPION, several new characters are introduced to the series, including members of the Layton and Kasim families.

In book 1, JEWEL IN THE CROWN, Hari Kumar was wrongfully jailed by the wicked Ronald Merrick for the rape of Daphne Manners Hari's secret love. When Daphne refused to press charges Hari was detained as a political prisoner. In JEWEL, the story of Hari's life was told from the court proceedings and other second hand accounts. JEWEL covers a period of about fifty years.

In SCORPION, Hari tells the story of his life up to 1942. A large section of this 500 page volume reads like a court proceeding since Hari shares his story with Captain Rowan, who has been ordered by the Governor to interview Kumar in prison.

Lady Manners, Daphne aunt, is a secret witness to the interview. It is Lady Manners who has persuaded the British authorities to revisit the reasons for Hari's imprisonment. During the proceedings, Hari is told Daphne is dead. "Twin rivulets gleamed on his prison cheeks, and then the image became blurred and she felt a corresponding wetness on her own..."

I think it would be extremely hard to follow this book without having first read JEWEL IN THE CROWN. A large part of SCORPION is used to elaborate and further the plot introduced in JEWEL. Dipping into SCORPION without having first read JEWEL would be like trying to watch a serial after missing a few critical episodes.

In addition, the introduction of the Laytons and the Kasims might also seem disjointed unless one knows SCORPION is not a "stand alone" novel. In spite of these limitations, SCORPION is a wonderful book, and thus I have given it 5 stars.

In SCORPION, Sarah Layton takes on the central role. Sarah is the only Layton to have had contact with Lady Manners and be concerned about the events in Mayapore. Sarah has two long exchanges with Ronald Merrick, Hari Kumar's nemesis. Sarah meets Captain Rowan Hari's liberator. Sarah is struggling with her own issues surrounding the lives of the English in India. Sarah is the one to watch. And Sarah is an Aries. Her sister Susan is the Scorpio.

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5.0étoiles sur 5 The theme of the dying Scorpion prevails throughout.., Mai 6 1998
Par Un client
A scorpion, when death is imminent, will simply coil up into a ball, and succum to death; this is what the reader is led to believe in part two of the Raj Quartet. This prevailing theme appears and reappears throughout the entire series; sometimes subtly. Reader beware, however, as the real cause for the scorpions coil is revealed in "A Division of the Spoils."

Indians coil at English oppression as demonstrated by Hari Kumar's silence over the rape of the white woman he loves; Hindus coil at Muslim antagonism, and Susan, an English woman coils up again and again, in fear of life itself. Scott uses this theme to capture the essence of the strife between England and India, and between the Muslims and the Hindu's.

While part one of the Jewel in the crown puts the focus on Hindu culture, Scott leads the reader to understand the Muslim perspective in "The Day of the Scorpion." Perhaps Paul Scott, in the Raj Quartet, can bring the reader to more fully understand the dynamics of human nature, morality and culture better than any writer of this century. The thoughts and ideas that prevail throughout the series are applicable to many international situations. This truely makes "The Day of the Scorpion" a cross cultural work of art.

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