From Publishers Weekly
A successful London barrister approaching middle age, Mark Hodder has become obsessed with finding the truth behind his father's disappearance in Pakistan in 1947. Mark returns to the land of his childhood memories, and although the elements of the mystery start to fall into place, there are some initially confusing, expository flashbacks as the author sets up the protagonists of the fascinating drama that will ensue. Roger, from a poor Yorkshire family, has struggled to enter the Indian Civil Service on merit alone. Anthony (who will become Mark's father) is more fortunate. They meet at the ICS training college and become friends. But the class differences between them, the different ambitions that spur them and the woman they both love divide the young men while, at the same time, tie them throughout their lives in an unpredictable, fatal and violent conflict that is as irrational as the tragic events on the larger canvas of India at the end of the Raj. For a novel set in that period, Household Gods is refreshingly without cliche. The European colonial servants and their families, and the Muslim and Hindu gentry, merchants, servants and officials are all fleshed out as individuals, not types. This novel by the author of The Burning Lake is a complex, satisfying narrative that repays the effort to make sense of its first few chapters.
Copyright 1988 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Copyright 1988 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal
The emotional climate at the end of British rule in India is expertly portrayed in this story of a middle-aged barrister's revived curiosity about his father's mysterious disappearance during the partition of India and Pakistan. The story, tracing the father's early days in India, the difficulties that the British-imposed political and social systems caused for them, and the breakdown of that order after the war, ultimately exposes a series of frail and disappointing relationships. Although a complex arrangement of chapters causes the time period and the focal characters to change often and abruptly, the reader can piece together events in a way that the main character cannot. Intriguing writing by a man who lived through some of those events. Allayne C. Heyduk, Riverside Schl., Oneonta, N.Y.
Copyright 1988 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Copyright 1988 Reed Business Information, Inc.
