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It is Bhatt's sense of sound architecture that makes this book so satisfying to lovers of the lower ranges. His grasp of the curious array of factors that combined to give us the hill station - theological, sociological and meteorological - is both lucid and convincing. He has given the subject a coherent vision. Credit must also go to Mapin for a production that does India proud. -- Bill Aitken, The India Magazine of her People and Culture, April/May 1998.
MCGILL NEWS, Alumni Quarterly, Vikrarn Bhatt's Resorts of the Raj: Hill Stations of India is a sumptuous treat for the eyes. The heart of the book is the McGill professor of architecture's exquisite photographs of the hill stations to which the British rulers of India resorted for much of the year. The accompanying text implicitly makes a case for the architecture of the stations as part of the heritage of India, deserving of preservation. This is despite the ironic fact that they were originally seen as salubrious enclaves of Britishness, "homes away from home" for health seekers and the homesick wishing to escape the heat and bustle of the Indian plain. Bhatt even seems to suggest that the architecture of the stations was better integrated to its environment than some of the more haphazard development which succeeded it. Bhatt's text is charming, written with a light touch...
Agreeably urbane and a fount of information, Bhatt is an enjoyable guide to the architectural legacy of the Raj. -- Elizabeth Elbourne, McGill Professor of History
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Superbly evocative, sympathetic and well written.,
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This review is from: Resorts of the Raj: Hill Stations of India (Hardcover)
This is not a coffee table picture book even though the photography is very good. This book is far more than that. It is a very sympathetic, well researched and superbly evocative pictorial and architectural history of the British in the Hill Stations of India. It is the work of a man who understands thoroughly his country and its history and who can relate its past and its relationship with the present without fear, favour or prejudice. Interwoven with humour and vignettes of the society of The Raj this is a well balanced, informative and most enjoyable book. I recommend it to all who care for India and its fascinating history.
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