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McCluskieganj

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'This novel has the same charm as John Steinbeck's Cannery Row. Intensely nostalgic and engrossing.' - Hansda Sowendra Shekhar

Denis McGowan left India for Hong Kong to make his fortune.As the years passed and his printing press prospered, he losttouch with home. But as news of Hong Kong's impendinghandover by Britain to China trickles in, McGowan's stablelife seems suddenly uncertain. And it stirs up his memory,filling him with nostalgic ache for his village in India. That's when young Robin McGowandecides to travel to the village his father speaks of McCluskieganj, an Anglo-Indian agricultural havenfounded in the 1940s in what is now Jharkhand. Only, when he gets there, he finds that the villageis nothing like the idyllic home of his father's childhood.Overrun by outlaws, riddled with politics and controlled by landmafia, this is not the place where the nature-loving tribalshad once peacefully co-existed with the Anglo-Indians whochose India over Britain in 1947. This is a true-to-life portrait of an extraordinary village.

278 pages, Kindle Edition

First published January 1, 2010

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Vikas Kumar Jha

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Profile Image for Vikas Singh.
Author 4 books335 followers
November 17, 2020
Brilliant in depth research into a unique Anglo Indian settlement in the heart of Adivasi belt of Jharkhand. Though claimed as a fictional account, most of the characters in the book have actually lived or are living in McCluskieganj. The book is a fascinating socio-economic-cultural study into the lives of people who settled down year. The translation is very good and while reading you get completely immersed in the lives of its people. An honest account of this settlement which also weaves within the plot the local politics and greed of local leaders. A must read for everyone who is interested in the lives, aspirations and culture of the fast disappearing Anglo Indian community in India.
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