A Passage to India
E.M. Forster, A Passage to India
(1910s English girl confused by experience of the Raj)
Between Two Worlds
Ruth Prawer Jhabvala, Heat and DustĀ Ā (Englishwoman contrasts modern India with her aunt"s 1920s experience)
James Clavell, ShogunĀ Ā (American becomes samurai in 17th-century Japan)
John Le Carre, The Perfect SpyĀ Ā ("autobiography" of ipper-echelon British spy - and double-agent, trying to discover where his loyalty lies)
Henry James, The AmbassadorsĀ Ā (rich 1900s Americans take "culture" to Europe, find it more civilised than they expected)
Confused Emotions
R.K. Narayan, The Vendor of SweetsĀ Ā (devout Hindu in rural India dismayed by son"s "progressive" ways)
V.S. Naipaul, A House for Mr BiswasĀ Ā (Indian Hindu in Jamaica caught between dependence on his wife"s all-engulfing family and his longing to lead his own life)
L.P. Hartley, The Go-BetweenĀ Ā (small boy in 1910s England carries love-messages, emotions he only dimly understands)
Paul Theroux, Fong and the IndiansĀ Ā (Indian shopkeeper struggling to survive in rural, tribal Africa)
Willa Cather, My AntonĆaĀ Ā (daughter of 19th-century Bohemian immigrants growing up in rural Nebraska)
Imperialism, Good and Bad
Timothy Mo, An Insular PossessionĀ Ā (blockbusting novel about English imperialism in Honk Kong)
James Blish, A Case of ConscienceĀ Ā (should mineral-rich planet be exploited at expense of native inhabitants" life and culture?)
James Blish, A Case of ConscienceĀ Ā (should mineral-rich planet be exploited at expense of native inhabitants" life and culture?)
Rudyard Kipling, KimĀ Ā (adventures of Anglo-indian boy in heyday of Raj)
Twilight of Empire
Paul Scott, Staying OnĀ Ā (plight of English in India after independence)
Peter Vansittart, Three Six SevenĀ Ā (Romanised Britons watching advance of barbarism after 4th century collapse of Roman power)
Morris West, The AmbassadorĀ Ā (Us ambassador in Vietnam, appalled by his country"s action there)
Gerald Seymour, Field of BloodĀ Ā (underover SAS officer hunts IRA suspect in present-day Belfast)
P.H. Newby, The Picnic at SakkaraĀ Ā (English teacher in 1950s Egypt confused by collapse of British Empire)













