Wer Dornen sät

by Rebecca Ryman

Other authorsManfred Ohl (Translator), Hans Sartorius (Translator)
Paperback, 1995

Status

Available

Call number

B RYMAN

Publication

Weltbild (1995)

Description

"The Veil of Illusion begins in 1871, fourteen years after the Indian Sepoy Mutiny. During this horrifying eruption Jai Raventhorne vanished, believed to have been executed by the British for masterminding the notorious Bibighar massacre in which over two hundred European women and children were slaughtered. His wife, Olivia, refuses to accept that Jai could be guilty of such a heinous crime; she is obsessed with the need to prove his innocence and to penetrate the dense mystery that surrounds his final days."--BOOK JACKET.Title Summary field provided by Blackwell North America, Inc. All Rights Reserved

User reviews

LibraryThing member Misfit
The Veil of Illusion begins about 13 years after the Sepoy Rebellion and the massacre at Bibighar when Jai Raventhorne was accused of participating in and presumably hanged (or was he?) for his crimes. Olivia mourns her beloved Jai and she has struggled over the years to prove his innocence. Their
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children Amos and Maya bear the burdens of mixed parentage and stigma of their father's alleged heinous activities. Maya meets and falls in love with a high born Englishman, Christian Pendlebury, much to the chagrin of his parents newly arrived from England. Also involved in Maya and Amos' life is the mysterious Eurasian Kyle Hawkesworth who prints a local paper and also has a very hidden agenda (and a BIG secret) in respects to Christian's father Lord Jasper.

This is a story that is very difficult to put into words, and is very different from Olivia and Jai. There are no star crossed lovers that keep you turning the page well into the night waiting for the next surprise, the first half of the book is actually taken up with setting up the story and providing the flash backs into what happened prior to the Mutiny.

What this book is about is the plight of the Eurasians in colonial India, whether they are poor and base born or independently wealthy as the Raventhorne's are. Not accepted by either the British community or the Indians, theirs is a life lived in constant shadow and insecurity. The author uses several interesting methods with her characters to keep this theme at the forefront of her story, from Olivia's support of a home for women, to Amos and Kyle's interest in setting up a school for the lesser born Eurasian children, Christopher's idealistic dreams of what he can accomplish during his public service in India, and the most heartbreaking of all when Maya is rejected by a member of an Indian family she's known since childhood.

As stated earlier, this is not a romance with star crossed lovers and a HEA ending for all, and if that's what you are expecting I recommend you stop and just savor the ending from Olivia and Jai and keep that in your memories forever. However, if like me you need to read the rest of the story and enjoy a novel heavy on the history and setting of 19C India and the British Raj along with an eye opening look at the prejudices of the time against the Eurasian population it's well worth your time searching this one out. Ryman was born and raised in India and her knowledge and love of the culture shine through making for a well written and well rounded journey to another place and time, and isn't that what historical fiction is all about?
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LibraryThing member wagner.sarah35
This sequel to Olivia and Jai chronicles the tale of the Eurasian Raventhorne family in Calutta in the late nineteenth century. Olivia and her two children live under the shadow of her deceased husband's reputed massacre during the 1857 mutiny. Determined to prove his innocence, Olivia and her
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children also struggle to be accepted into the racist British society in Calcutta, especially when the daughter of the family, Maya, becomes involved with one of the British civil service officers. While not offering the romance of its predecessor, The Veil of Illusion nonetheless possesses many twists and turns, figures seeking revenge and redemption, and delves into the depths of emotion felt by its characters.
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Language

Original language

English

Barcode

2617
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