A SINGULAR HOSTAGE
Thalassa Ali, . . Bantam, $13.95 (368pp) ISBN 978-0-553-38176-4
What's a Victorian girl to do? Twenty years old, not quite beautiful, more interested in military history than in conventional female doings, Mariana Givens sets off for India with Gov.-Gen. Lord Auckland's enormous party in hopes of finding a husband. Several eligible British officers are ready to propose, but Mariana would rather study Urdu with wise Munshi Sahib or hang out with the elephants. The officers are weepy or large-eared, except for Harry Fitzgerald, who turns out not to be eligible, after all. It's the eponymous hostage who steals her heart: Saboor, a luminous infant who was kidnapped by the ailing, one-eyed Maharajah Ranjit Singh, ruler of the Punjab, whom Lord Auckland is on his way to meet. After Saboor's mother is poisoned, Mariana is readily enlisted to return Saboor to his father, Hassan Sahib. Will she come to love Hassan as much as she loves Saboor? Although the ending is inconclusive, suggesting a sequel (one is in the works; called
Reviewed on: 10/07/2002
Genre: Fiction
Mass Market Paperbound - 528 pages - 978-0-553-58414-1
Open Ebook - 319 pages - 978-0-307-49099-5
Prebound-Other - 978-0-613-91668-4