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Princely Rajasthan: Rajput Palaces and Mansions
Antonio Martinelli , and George Michell Manufacturer: Vendome Press ProductGroup: Book Binding: Hardcover Similar Items:
ASIN: 0865652406 |
Book Description
Rajasthan is a growing destination for both Indian and Western visitors, who are attracted by the region's history, tradition, luxurious hotels, and cuisine. This lush new book, written by a leading architecture and social historian, traces the evolution of palace architecture in Rajasthan from the 16th to the early 20th century. George Michell focuses on the major capitals of Rajput power, including Jaipur, Udaipur, Jodhpur, and Bikaner, as well as the lesser centers of Alwar, Bundi, Kota, and Jaisalmer, providing a glimpse into the lives of the often-colorful maharajas who lived in these and other fantastic palaces.
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Lonely Planet Rajasthan, Delhi & Agra (Lonely Planet Travel Guides)
Abigail Hole Manufacturer: Lonely Planet Publications ProductGroup: Book Binding: Paperback Similar Items:
ASIN: 1740597729 |
Customer Reviews:
A Typical Lonely Planet ..........2007-01-09
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Knopf Guide: India, Rajasthan (Knopf Guides)
Knopf Guides Manufacturer: Knopf ProductGroup: Book Binding: Paperback Similar Items:
ASIN: 0679765913 Release Date: 1996-11-19 |
Book Description
Visit the "land of princes" with its great desert forts and palaces bearing traces of India's royal heritage. See the pink sandstone city of Jaipur and the water palaces at Udaipur. 1,000 full-color illustrations.Customer Reviews:
Never received.......2007-04-01
for virtual and actual travelers.......2004-01-01
Great book, and Birkali is a great place!!.......2000-12-27
Knopf Guide India : Rajasthan : Jaipur, Bikaner, Jaisalmer,.......2000-06-22
Like all the Knopf Guides, I recommend it highly.
Exquisitely Done!.......2000-04-28
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Rajasthan
Pauline Van Lynden Manufacturer: Assouline ProductGroup: Book Binding: Hardcover Similar Items:
ASIN: 2843234468 |
Book Description
This stunningly lavish volume is based on Pauline van Lynden's notebooks, photographs and other material gathered over fifteen years of wanderings in Rajasthan, India. The book begins with Pauline's first overwhelming impressions of color, people and places. In search of material, making friends on her way, she discovers the Rajasthani cities, is invited to a royal wedding and finds artisans devoted to their centuries-old crafts. After some time, a longing for quiet draws her to the countryside, and the second half of the book focuses on the villages and a rhythm of life which has not changed much over the centuries. The fourteen chapters of the book are each introduced by two pages of stories and descriptions by Pauline to explain, in a personal way, the following pages of photographs. The text is limited to her impressions, as the book is meant to be essentially a visual experience. With her artistic background, an upbringing in international surroundings, a curious and eclectic mind, a keen photographer's eye and a great sensitivity for detail and atmosphere, Pauline is perfectly equipped to bring her own view of Rajasthan to the public in this informed and evocative manner.Customer Reviews:
Gorgeous!.......2007-04-05
Beautiful!.......2007-01-06
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Reversing the Gaze: Amar Singh's Diary: A Colonial Subject's Narrative of Imperial India
Amar Singh , Mohan Singh Kanota , and Lloyd I. Rudolph Manufacturer: Westview Press ProductGroup: Book Binding: Hardcover ASIN: 0813336260 |
Book Description
An engrossing narrative of a colonial subject's life contemplating his Imperial masters at the height of colonialism in India; based upon the first eight years of his life-long diary.Amar Singh, a Rajput nobleman and officer in the Indian Army, kept a diary for forty-four years, from 1898, when he was twenty, until his death in 1942. In it he writes about the Jodhpur court, the Imperial Cadet Corps, and the British Expeditionary Force in China during the Boxer rebellion. A century before hybridity, he constructs a hybrid self, an Edwardian officer cum gentleman and a martial Rajput cum manor lord. With a diary acting as an alter ego and best friend, Amar Singh resists becoming "a coolie for the raj" when he finds the British to be friends as well as racist masters. He writes and reads extensively -"to keep himself amused," he says, and to avoid the boredom of princedom and raj philistinism. Here the authors focus on the first eight years of Amar Singh's diary (1898-1905), offering a rare and intimate glimpse into the British colonialism from the point of view of a loyal subject. Illustrated with fifty photographs and facsimiles from Amar Singh's readings.
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Stones in the Sand: The Architecture of Rajasthan
Giles Tillotson Manufacturer: Marg Pubns ProductGroup: Book Binding: Hardcover ASIN: 8185026521 |
Book Description
This volume presents the characteristic traditional architecture of Rajasthani towns and cities: the stone built forts, palaces and havelis, temples, tanks, and kunds, from the 16th century onwards when religion developed the distinctive style of domestic and civic architecture for which it is well known. These articles, written by experts in diverse fields, illustrate how these great and beautiful structures were first conceived, constructed, and inhabited.
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India Treasures : An Epic Novel of Rajasthan and Northern India through the Ages
Gary Worthington Manufacturer: Timebridges Publishers ProductGroup: Book Binding: Paperback Similar Items:
ASIN: 0970766203 |
Book Description
India Treasures is a monumental work of fiction covering the sweep of Indian history. A search through palaces and a maze-like fortress for a Maharaja's legendary hidden treasure weaves together stories of danger and romance, and of spiritual and artistic triumphs. The book portrays key historical persons and events in the nation's religious, cultural, and political evolution.Readers will experience meeting the Buddha; being lost in the Great Indian Desert with a caravan merchant; riding an elephant into battle with the famous Emperor Ashoka; painting a celebrated mural masterpiece with a medieval artist; joining a lovely princess as she defies her powerful father for the enemy king whom she loves; transcending life's trials as a disciple of a great Sufi saint; sharing the perils of a noble Muslim family targeted by a hostile Sultan; and matching wits with the mighty Mughal Emperor Akbar.
The novellas are linked by the treasure hunt through the immense fortress of Mangarh by government tax raiders during Prime Minister Indira Gandhi's suspension of civil liberties in the mid-1970s. Vijay Singh, the capable and conscientious leader of the searchers, battles a corrupt political boss who imprisons the Maharaja of Mangarh and preys on the lovely princess Kaushalya. Vijay fears that in Mangarh his secret may be exposed: he claims to be of the high Rajput caste, but in fact he is an Untouchable from a nearby village.
Included in the book are a Reading Group Discussion Guide and an extensive Glossary.
The sequel, India Fortunes, which depicts major historical characters and events from the 1600's through the 20th century, is scheduled for publication in the fall of 2002.
Customer Reviews:
Must read if you're interested in India/Rajasthan.......2006-05-20
So good you never want it to end!.......2006-01-27
India Treasures is an engaging novel.......2003-10-11
Superb and Exciting Indian Historical.......2003-08-06
I am from India and a voracious reader of all types of books (including the aforementioned Rutherford and Michener), and I am unusually critical of those that write about India and don't have their books ring true. I initially picked up the book with the feeling that it might be amusing, but probably wouldn't be terribly accurate. Mr Worthington has exceeded even Indian authors on the accuracy front: his names ring true, the language rings true (including the use of Indian words: for example he makes the fine distinction between jauhar and sati), and the characters ring true. M.M. Kaye (the author of The Far Pavilions) lived in India for many years, and yet got the shade of meanings of some Indian words wrong, while as I read Mr Worthington's India Treasures I felt that a fellow Indian had written it.
Mr Worthington's best achievement, though, is that he has rooted the main story in present times, with historical stories that have a link to the main story. While each can be read separately, the book is best enjoyed in sequence, as this generates in the reader an accurate picture of how modern India evolved into the complex society that it is today, with the myriad external influences combining and sythesizing with internal realities.
My highest praise, though, would be reserved for the language and the manner in which Mr Worthington tells the story. He plunges the reader without delay into an intriguing situation and a wonderful story. Those who are captivated by books such as ...and Ladies of the Club, The Far Pavilions, Sarum, and Steinbeck's East of Eden, will find that the straightforward storytelling and language reminds them of those books, and also of the time when they were children and their favorite adult read them stories that they did not want to end and that kept them captivated way beyond their bedtimes. That feeling of "don't let it end" keeps one reading and reading until, sadly, it does end (but, never fear, there is a promised sequel!). The characters and stories will stay with you for a long, long time. The understanding of India will, perhaps, stay with you longer.
This book, in my estimation, is accessible to children of age 14 and above. The story of the elephant is particularly entrancing. The main story, set during a period in India's history under Indira Gandhi, called "The Emergency", when individual rights were suspended for eighteen months, and the government rode rough-shod over people, will probably be an eye-opener for many people, including those in India who were born after 1975.
Unlike any other book on India that I am aware of, this book cuts an illuminating swathe through Indian history (even I learned something about Indian history), and blends history and fiction seamlessly into a superb entertainment.
There is romance in this book, there is adventure in this book, there is history in this book. I am impressed enough by this book to be inspired to write my first Amazon.com review, and I have been buying books from Amazon since early 1997. While I started the book prepared to find faults and shrug it off as another one of those books on India, I found that it won me over in short order. I hope Mr Worthington keeps on writing, I hope more readers discover this gem, and I look forward with pleasurable anticipation to his next book.
Read it! As the much used (and sometimes abused, though not in this case) phrase goes, "You will not be disappointed!"
A Treasure of India.......2002-03-24
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The Palaces of Rajasthan
George Michell Manufacturer: Frances Lincoln Publishers ProductGroup: Book Binding: Hardcover Similar Items: ASIN: 0711225052 |
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Impressions of Rajasthan
Carisse Busquet , and Gerard Busquet Manufacturer: Flammarion ProductGroup: Book Binding: Hardcover Similar Items:
ASIN: 208011171X Release Date: 2003-10-24 |
Book Description
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Listen to the Heron's Words: Reimagining Gender and Kinship in North India
Gloria Goodwin Raheja , and Ann Grodzins Gold Manufacturer: University of California Press ProductGroup: Book Binding: Paperback Similar Items:
ASIN: 0520083717 |
Book Description
In many South Asian oral traditions, herons are viewed as duplicitous and conniving. These traditions tend also to view women as fragmented identities, dangerously split between virtue and virtuosity, between loyalties to their own families and those of their husbands. In women's songs, however, symbolic herons speak, telling of alternative moral perspectives shaped by women. The heron's words--and women's expressive genres more generally--criticize pervasive North Indian ideologies of gender and kinship that place women in subordinate positions. By inviting readers to "listen to the heron's words," the authors convey this shift in moral perspective and suggest that these spoken truths are compelling and consequential for the women in North India.Books:
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