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The Mulberry Empire by Philip Hensher
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The Mulberry Empire

by Philip Hensher

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166435,601 (3.57)10
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Flamingo (2003), Paperback, 544 pages

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The Mulberry Empire deals with Britain's abortive attempt to take Kabul in 1839 under competition from the Russians. The story swings from Afghanistan to Moscow and London. Philip Hensher delivers luxurious sentences and interesting characters in all the settings. The book is attractively hefty so keep it back to read when you have time to wallow your way through it. What novels should be. ( )
  dylanwolf | Nov 27, 2006 |
From Publishers Weekly
Hensher's ambitious new novel (his first to be published in the United States) concerns a lesser-known chapter of Afghan history the British occupation of Kabul in 1839. In the mid-1830s, Alexander Burnes, a British officer, became the London sensation du jour after publishing a book on his adventures in the East, including his encounters with the Afghan prince, Amir Dost Mohammed Khan. His book roused British interest in Afghanistan, a possible new colony and market. Fearing that the Russians might take Kabul first, the British marched into the city, ousted the Amir, and replaced him with one favored by their ally, the Punjabi king. Though the British troops succeeded and remained encamped outside Kabul for three years, the Afghanis at last attacked and sent 16,000 British troops retreating through the valley of their death: they were ambushed, and only one survived. Adopting a part timeless, part ironic storytelling voice, Hensher follows several characters in this vast tapestry: Burnes, of course, and the Amir, but also Bella Garraway, the woman the Amir courts during his year in London; Charles Masson, a British deserter who finds refuge in Kabul; and Vitkevich, a Wilde-like Russian emissary, among many others. Mastering the light touch necessary for a complex history, Hensher moves easily from realm to realm, though he best captures the vanities of society whether of Britain's "upper few thousand" or Moscow's salons. The shifting focus weakens the drama, but what Hensher loses in tension he makes up for in information. Thus the reader learns Persian has six words for mulberry a holy fruit of Islam and Pushto, uncountable. For the post-modern, post-empire reader, ironies abound, and gently as Hensher tells it, the tale is cautionary: any nation should think twice before unseating a foreign prince.
Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc. ( )
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  EricaKline | Oct 31, 2006 |
This book uses many different characters to explore life in the British Empire in England, Afghanistan and India. One of my favorite characters was the aristocrat Bella who has a love affair with the explorer Burnes. When Burnes returns to Afhanistan, Bella wastes away her life in the country, a very sad portrayal of wasted potential and lost love. The book is most suspenseful and dramatic in the Afghanistan parts, here we see the British try to befriend the Amir, in an effort to obtain his kingdom. Near the end the Afghanistan sections become increasingly terrifying and thrilling. ( )
  kateh | Oct 28, 2006 |
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Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0375414886, Hardcover)

In the spring of 1839, some fifty thousand British forces entered Afghanistan with “the full pomp of Empire,” possessed of the certainty that they would replace the Amir with someone less hostile toward their ally, the King of the Punjab. Three years later, a single British horseman rode out of the Afghan mountains into India—the sole survivor of the original vast contingent. The Mulberry Empire is the magnificently told story of this conflict—of the events that surrounded it, of the politics and people on both sides, of the passions and pride that led to the destruction of the British and the triumph of the Afghans.

At the center: Alexander Burnes—a British explorer who ventures into the fabled city of Kabul, befriends the all-powerful Amir, and returns to England a hero. The bearer of amazing stories, he is unwitting emissary to and from both nations, neither of which can see how his impressions will change their worlds. And there is Bella Garraway, whose upper-class, predictable life will be wholly undone—leaving her with nothing, and then everything—when her path crosses Burnes’s. Around them, a superbly wrought cast of characters: English, Russian, Indian, Afghan, Persian—a shifting universe of men and women, the powerful and the pawns, caught in a vortex of history.

Spanning a decade and moving between London and Calcutta, St. Petersburg and Kabul, The Mulberry Empire is a brilliant synthesis of fact and imagination, as rich in the details of history and place as it is in the complexities and drama of human nature. It is an unexpectedly timely, masterful novel of fidelity and dreams, belief and chance, an epic of empires built and lost, and built again.

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:24 -0400)

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