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Forster's classic tale of culture clash in Colonial India focuses on both the prejudices and simple misunderstandings which exists between the people of India and their British rulers. Miss Quested begins her sojourn in India with a desire to "know" the Indian people, but her culturally ignorant insertion into the life of Dr. Aziz is destined for tragedy.
E.M. Forster is a masterful storyteller and has complete control of the "show, don't tell" aspect of writing. He immerses you in the situation ...more
E.M. Forster is a masterful storyteller and has complete control of the "show, don't tell" aspect of writing. He immerses you in the situation ...more

I just finished this book. Sadly, I just never got into it. I felt that Forster's writing style was choppy and disjointed. Many times, I just could not understand what he was trying to communicate. His dialogues seemed superficial. To me, they sounded more like outlines. I tried to find one character that I could relate to. I don't know if Forster's characters seemed shallow to me, or whether Forster just did not develop them enough for me to feel something for them.
I feel that Forster's purpose ...more
I feel that Forster's purpose ...more

Read this for the Pankaj Mishra essay. "If India is governed from the bridge tables and tennis courts of Chandrapur, well, the day is coming when she will be so no longer."
Forster was the first novelist imagining the subject peoples from a perspective of empathy and a position of equality. This alone makes Forster stand head and shoulders above his contemporaries and his work unprecedented in Orientalist literature.
As one early Indian perspective stated "I was filled with a sense of great reli ...more
Forster was the first novelist imagining the subject peoples from a perspective of empathy and a position of equality. This alone makes Forster stand head and shoulders above his contemporaries and his work unprecedented in Orientalist literature.
As one early Indian perspective stated "I was filled with a sense of great reli ...more

" 'Yes we all have limitations' she thought, withdrew her palm from the wall and laid it on her forehead."
For all the frailties, shortcomings and imperfections of the human condition that are laid bare before us in Forster's A Passage to India, there's also the human potential for courage and tendency towards a sense of justice, and connections against all odds. This is what makes Literature and particularly 19th century literature (Forster was often called a 19th century novelist writing in the ...more
For all the frailties, shortcomings and imperfections of the human condition that are laid bare before us in Forster's A Passage to India, there's also the human potential for courage and tendency towards a sense of justice, and connections against all odds. This is what makes Literature and particularly 19th century literature (Forster was often called a 19th century novelist writing in the ...more

Aug 31, 2020
Xan Shadowflutter
rated it
liked it
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review of another edition
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2020_reads
I'm sure this read better in 1924 than in 2020. Probably bold and controversial for its time, but by today's standards quite ordinary and even boring at times. I never did understand what happened to Miss Quested or what was going through her mind. How does one go about hallucinating such an encounter? Seems like a difficult thing to do.
I thought once the trial had ended and some loose ends were tied up, the story would end. But what came after the trial has to be one of the longest epilogues I ...more
I thought once the trial had ended and some loose ends were tied up, the story would end. But what came after the trial has to be one of the longest epilogues I ...more

An excellent compendium of literary essays, reviews and critiques on one of the greatest 20th century novels of our times. The collection of essays and reviews range from reviews that came out right when the book was published, providing us with an excellent insight into how British and Indian society reacted to this work and what that says about those times.

Dec 24, 2022
Grace
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review of another edition
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2020-print-books
#48 in my chronological read of McCrums 100 greatest.

Aug 05, 2012
Anna Kļaviņa
rated it
it was amazing
Shelves:
british-irish,
rakstnieks,
classic,
made-into-a-film,
historical-fiction,
1001books,
asia,
read-in-2015

Jan 23, 2014
Zsa Zsa
marked it as to-read

Apr 03, 2014
Elvira Dobis
marked it as to-read

Jan 08, 2015
Vimaris
marked it as to-read

Sep 30, 2017
Zoe
marked it as to-read

Dec 05, 2017
Perlie
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Oct 28, 2018
Karawan
marked it as to-read

Feb 01, 2019
Toni
marked it as to-read

Mar 06, 2019
Hayley
marked it as to-read
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review of another edition
Shelves:
already-own-bookshelf,
classic

Dec 04, 2019
Allison
marked it as to-read

Aug 08, 2020
Anu
rated it
it was amazing
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review of another edition
Shelves:
classics,
indian-challenge

Oct 04, 2021
Stephanie
marked it as to-read

Nov 26, 2022
Alexander
marked it as to-read
