India, 1948.
Margaret Wood and Rodney Savage are reunited, a year on from their first meeting on Independence Day.
Margaret is a missionary and a nurse who came to India with her husband.
But he has died of a terrible fever, and that has left her, questioning her faith and devotion, to carry out the mission alone.
Savage, who has known, lived and fought in India for years, is bewildered by a country he no longer recognizes, and, now rootless, he struggles to find his place in it.
As the two grow closer, the India that they knew falls apart.
Savage is rejected from the village tribe that called him 'Gora Raja' - the White King.
They tell him he is a danger to the people of India and when the village general dies in prison, he is accused of murder.
Wanted as a criminal, Savage must turn his back on the India he once knew, and find his way in this strange land.
For this was not the India of the Rajput knights who had fought against Jason Savage, but Nehru’s India.
And it was a country that no longer needed the British...
'An Indian Affair' is an evocative and powerful story of love, tradition and history. Masters winningly sets the scene with extraordinary attention to detail.
Praise for John Masters:
‘An exciting and at times a deeply moving novel’ THE TIMES
‘Mr Masters fully deserves the wide public his books have won him and his admirers will find here the qualities they look for — the well-contrived plot, the dramatic incidents, the thundering-good yarnery of it all’ THE OBSERVER
Lieutenant Colonel John Masters, DSO (1914–1983) was an English officer in the Indian Army who fought in World War Two, and later a novelist. His works are noted for their descriptions of the British Empire in India. They include ‘Thunder at Sunset’, ‘Man of War’, and ‘Far, Far, the Mountain Peak’.
‘An Indian Affair’ was originally published as 'Fandango Rock'.
Endeavour Press is the UK's leading independent publisher of digital books.
Margaret Wood and Rodney Savage are reunited, a year on from their first meeting on Independence Day.
Margaret is a missionary and a nurse who came to India with her husband.
But he has died of a terrible fever, and that has left her, questioning her faith and devotion, to carry out the mission alone.
Savage, who has known, lived and fought in India for years, is bewildered by a country he no longer recognizes, and, now rootless, he struggles to find his place in it.
As the two grow closer, the India that they knew falls apart.
Savage is rejected from the village tribe that called him 'Gora Raja' - the White King.
They tell him he is a danger to the people of India and when the village general dies in prison, he is accused of murder.
Wanted as a criminal, Savage must turn his back on the India he once knew, and find his way in this strange land.
For this was not the India of the Rajput knights who had fought against Jason Savage, but Nehru’s India.
And it was a country that no longer needed the British...
'An Indian Affair' is an evocative and powerful story of love, tradition and history. Masters winningly sets the scene with extraordinary attention to detail.
Praise for John Masters:
‘An exciting and at times a deeply moving novel’ THE TIMES
‘Mr Masters fully deserves the wide public his books have won him and his admirers will find here the qualities they look for — the well-contrived plot, the dramatic incidents, the thundering-good yarnery of it all’ THE OBSERVER
Lieutenant Colonel John Masters, DSO (1914–1983) was an English officer in the Indian Army who fought in World War Two, and later a novelist. His works are noted for their descriptions of the British Empire in India. They include ‘Thunder at Sunset’, ‘Man of War’, and ‘Far, Far, the Mountain Peak’.
‘An Indian Affair’ was originally published as 'Fandango Rock'.
Endeavour Press is the UK's leading independent publisher of digital books.