A Passage to India
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Narrated by:
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Sam Dastor
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By:
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E.M. Forster
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"Dastor's performance is outstanding." (AudioFile)
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The movie was good, but the book is even better.
Great Book and great performance
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India from a Englishman decades ago
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IN KEEPING WITH THE RAJ QUARTET
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I do not recall very many books that portray character to such a remarkable degree. British men and women, Indian Moslems, the servants--20 or 30 years before Great Britain lost India, and tells why it was simply inevitable. This book describes India's people and the British understanding of India than any number of other books.
I recall Samuel Butler's Way of All Flesh, Hemingway's books, the Forsyte Saga come immediately to mind.
The reading was superb. Otherwise, my words are inadequate to describe this book.
Wonder what British royalty thinks of You personally? Read this book!
What a pleasant surprise
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Published in 1924, “A Passage to India” is a primer on colonialism, ethnocentricity, and discrimination. Human nature is immutable and omnipresent, a force of good and evil.
The ugliness of colonialism (cultural domination), ethnocentrism, and discrimination is exemplified in Forster’s tour de force. Thankfully, the characters of Mrs. Moore and Ms. Quested give some sliver of hope for mankind’s redemption, a hope for cultural respect and truth.
SEEING THE TREES IN FORSTER
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