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5.0étoiles sur 5 phenomenal
This book is truly phenomenal! The way they portray Mehrunisa as a strong woman could not have been written any better. This book takes a stroll through Mogul India which I must say is truly amazing. It is a definite must read and will keep you turning the pages!
Publié le Jui 25 2007 par Passion for books

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2.0étoiles sur 5 Looooong and slow
I typically love books based on Indian culture and cultures that have arranged marriages, etc. However this book was not what I had hoped it would be.

While the story starts out great with a growing family moving to make a better life for themselves and the experiences they face, it slowly becomes something a bit more political and focuses on war too much. I could not...

Publié le Fév 10 2004 par Amanda Sykora

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2.0étoiles sur 5 Looooong and slow, Fév 10 2004
Par Amanda Sykora (Disputanta, VA United States) - Voir tous mes commentaires
I typically love books based on Indian culture and cultures that have arranged marriages, etc. However this book was not what I had hoped it would be.

While the story starts out great with a growing family moving to make a better life for themselves and the experiences they face, it slowly becomes something a bit more political and focuses on war too much. I could not get passed the war talk! It seemed to go on forever and I was disappointed by how the story unfolded. There seemed to be too much about the war and not enough about the main characters. I was very disappointed but that is probably because I was thinking the story would be something entirely different.

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2.0étoiles sur 5 Great plot but frustrating reading!, Jui 7 2009
Par The Mad Hatter "Seagull Books" (Prince Edward Island, Canada) - Voir tous mes commentaires
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)   
I will not go into the description of the story since this site allows the reader to preview excerpts and provides a description of the book. On the positive side, the plot and characters were well developed and the book had great potential.

Alas, there was also a negative side which resulted in a frustrating, and somewhat annoying, read. Although the book had a glossary at the back, there were so many foreign words throughout that one had to constantly flip back and forth to understand their meaning in English. Also, there was a lot of terminology, not contained in the glossary, that was meaningless unless you had an understanding of the hierarachy and language spoken in India.

Another issue with the book was the characters' names and the fact there were too many primary and secondary characters. Some names and positions held were lengthy and completely foreign to one not from India i.e., Ruqayya Sultan Begam, Qutubuddin Khan Koka and Ali Quli Khan Istajlu?? The reader had one heck of a time trying to remember "who was who" and what relationship one was to another. In one case, there were even two individuals with the same name (Muhammad Sharif.) The further one read, the more frustrating the book became to the point where, for all it's potential, I found myself counting the pages until the entire vexacious thing ended once and for all.
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5.0étoiles sur 5 phenomenal, Jui 25 2007
This book is truly phenomenal! The way they portray Mehrunisa as a strong woman could not have been written any better. This book takes a stroll through Mogul India which I must say is truly amazing. It is a definite must read and will keep you turning the pages!
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3.0étoiles sur 5 Actually I give it 3.5 stars, Mai 30 2004
Many of the reviewers have already written extensively about the plot so I won't repeat it here.

All the reviews I saw before I read the book complained about the shallow character development, and armed with that information, I read the book without high expectations. It did not disappoint, but neither did it surprise me. The problem with the characters is that you can't relate to them. You have no idea why they are doing this or that, only that they are doing certain things because Indu Sundaresen stated that they were. Because, of course, it's in the customs of the "times." Sometime she would give a reason for it, and we the readers would understand its logics, but we would not be involved emotionally in the decisions and care about what the characters are doing. The characters speak their own language, think their own thoughts, walk their own land, and Sundaresen details all that beautifully, but ultimately they, as real flesh-and-blood feeling thinking emotional human beings are as distant from us as their names on a pages of a history textbook.

Sometimes I would be anticipating a dramatic moment, but instead of a in-depth analysis of that moment, Sundaresen whooshes past it with a line or two. I am taken aback often by the woodenness of the characters, by their inability to respond in a human way. Of course, there are some places where Sundaresen excels and I am taken completely into the story.
The plot is quick, there are some parts which some people may call "war talk" but in fact it's just court intrigue that takes place outside of the court and with men. Sometimes all the telling and not enough showing might become tedious but it is a good history lesson. I'm an avid history buff and I love historical fiction no matter what form they come in so I didn't mind at all. All in all, this book left me with very little impression, but while I was reading it I was engrossed. Sundaresen knows her 17th century Indian history, customs and trivia well and I was highly entertained my her descriptions. I only wish that, while writing the book, she removed herself with all of her 'modern' influences from the book completely and let her characters run free. Just because the book is set in history doesn't mean the characters need to be as distant.

I also wanted to remind all of you that reviews are a simple way of summarizing your feelings about the book. In no way are they a complete reflection of all the thoughts and feelings toward a book. There are so many little things about the book, good and bad, that I can't remember or can't even articulate, and what I have written here is only a crude description of what the book really is about.

I know most of you have probably heard about Memoirs of a Geisha, so I won't rave about it here, and I absolutely recommend it because years after I read it the characters' personalities are still imprinted on my mind. One other lesser-known book, probably because it's relegated to the young adult section instead of the adult section (although it deserves to be placed in both) is Mara, Daughter of the Nile. This book is an absolutely amazing piece of historical fiction, it manages to capture a fast exciting plot, character development and a beautiful romances all in one package.

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5.0étoiles sur 5 Subtle...Elegant...Beautiful, Avril 22 2004
Par Rishi Shukla (Oakland, CA United States) - Voir tous mes commentaires
I was so captivated by this book that I had to struggle between my desire to read it straight through and taking my time, savoring it and making it last. The book is beautifully written. The main character is engaging, intelligent and very human. I disagree with some of the other reviewers who have said the characters are poorly developed. As an American-born Indian, I think that a person unfamiliar with Eastern cultures may miss the many subtle traits/events/descriptions that create a dynamic and vivid world that these richly developed characters inhabit. I actually received "The Feast of Roses" as a gift, read the first ten pages and knew I had to read the first book - because I fell in love with the world the author created. It is thrilling to see Indian authors telling our stories in a beautiful, poetic way.
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5.0étoiles sur 5 Best book ive read..., Avril 15 2004
This is a fantastic book...my favorite. I have read it atleast 5 times because I just cant get enough of it! Basically the plot is Mehrunissa falls in love with a prince, and he falls in love with her...except she is already engaged. So she yearns for him and he yearns for her...I dont want to give anymore away. But anyway BOTTOM LINE:Read it I guarentee you will love it.
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5.0étoiles sur 5 Where's the sequel?, Fév 27 2004
Par Un client
I loved this book! It was the first book I've read in a long time that I simply couldn't put down! I finished it in one day!
I really liked the character of Mehrunnisa and we get a very interesting glimpse of life in Mughal India and inside its' harem walls.
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5.0étoiles sur 5 Excellent!, Sep 18 2003
Par Un client
I really enjoyed reading this book....with each turn of a page came such anticipation in what would happen next. This is a captivating book, Indu has creatively taken me on a historical journey and brought to life, historic India. I recommend this book to anyone intrigued about the country and what life was like in that era. I have already purchased the following book "The Feast of Roses" where Indu continues the epic of Mehruninsa and the Monghul empire.
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4.0étoiles sur 5 More fiction than history, but very well-written, Aoû 20 2003
Par Un client
Like most historical fiction, this book is more fiction than history. However, the historical details are present, and not in a superfluous manner--they were sufficient to keep me from getting frustrated and were acutally woven into the story, not just halfheartedly thrown in.

As for the story itself, Sundaresan is a good writer, and knows how to hold her reader's interest. The characters are reasonably well-developed (I say "reasonably" because some are better developed than others), the descriptions are enough to keep the reader's imagination fired but not excessive, and the plotline itself is strong. I wouldn't put this book in the top-10 I have ever read, but it was still a four-star read and I will be one of the first to own "Feast of Roses", the sequel to "Twentieth Wife", when it comes out on paperback.

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4.0étoiles sur 5 Interesting snapshot of an era, Aoû 18 2003
Par Un client
In The Twentieth Wife, readers are told the fact-based tale of Merunissa, the woman who would become Emperor Jahangir's twentieth wife and, ultimately, the most powerful woman in the Empire. Before that happens, Jahangir and Merunissa are kept apart by a variety of forces conspiring against them, including Jahangir's power-hungry wife Jagat Gosini, Merunissa's first husband Ali Quili, differences in status, Ali Quili's exile from the kingdom, and Merunissa's father's fall from Jahangir's good graces. Throughout their separation, Merunissa and Jahangir share an intense but troublesome attraction and love from afar. However, the title gives everything away...we know from the start Merunissa will become Jahangir's twentieth wife.

This book was interesting, because in American schools we are often taught a great deal of European history, a great deal of American history, and a little Chinese and far Eastern history. That's it. We are really never taught about other region's histories, which are also rich and colorful. Most notably, American schools lack instruction on African history. Nor do I remember learning anything of Indian history.

Like European history, this tale features tales of princely revolts against their fathers, the king. There are tales of wars between empires and constantly shifting territorial borders. Notably, European, African, American and Indian history all has one thing in common--all feature the repression and silence of women.

Merunissa is luckier than most--she had both a father and a husband who respected her ideas despite her womanhood. Still, she suffers as a result of her sex. She has no choice about whom to marry, when to divorce, and where she will go. Though Merunissa does not wish to marry Ali Quili, she does so for her father's sake. To refuse the marriage arranged by Emperor Akbar will be a great insult. Merunissa's lifelong happiness is inconsequential by comparison. It is also interesting that men, even non-royalty, are allowed multiple wives plus concubines. There is never a question about whether polyandry was permitted--clearly, it wasn't.

Overall, a rich and interesting tale. Merunissa is a compelling character. I am curious as to how much of the tale is based on verifiable fact, and how much is the author's invention. This novel features both a compelling storyline and fully developed characters. Highly recommended.

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The Twentieth Wife: A Novel
The Twentieth Wife: A Novel par Indu Sundaresan (Paperback - Fév 18 2003)
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