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The Opium Clerk

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Kunal Basu's panoramic first novel follows the vagaries of Hiran's life, and the flow of the opium trade, from Calcutta to Canton.

Disguised as a missionary, he survives cholera, piracy and war in China, arriving back in India to find his homeland on the verge of another rebellion. And he finds himself suddenly father to a half-caste son, the child abandoned by the Englishman and his wife when they fled back in disgrace to Britain. As Hiran dedicates himself to the education of his new son, the cycle of regeneration continues.

Douglas, now an adult, neither black nor white, flees India himself for the Orient, again carried along on the flood of opium, this time to Borneo, to Sarawak: the land of the White Rajahs.

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Product Details
Weidenfeld & Nicolson
186159190X / 9781861591906
Hardback
823
10/05/2001
United Kingdom
English
Historic novels
312p.
21 cm
general /academic/professional/technical Learn More
Colourful, ambitious, dazzling, The Opium Clerk marks the debut of a new star. Jeanette Winterson says of Basu, 'The feeling of a long dream - nightbound, subterranean, images rising to the surface to be caught by the sun. The sound of voices - distant then near. The sound of one voice, in it's own key, singing the dream into daylight. This is Kunal Basu. Listen to him.'
Colourful, ambitious, dazzling, The Opium Clerk marks the debut of a new star. Jeanette Winterson says of Basu, 'The feeling of a long dream - nightbound, subterranean, images rising to the surface to be caught by the sun. The sound of voices - distant then near. The sound of one voice, in it's own key, singing the dream into daylight. This is Kunal Basu. Listen to him.' FA Modern & contemporary fiction (post c 1945), FV Historical fiction