Sea of Poppies
Cotton and rockets
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A fast-paced documentary series looks at education in Pune, one of the world’s fastest growing cities: Indian School.
Stephanie Forward introduces our book of the month for August 2009, Sea of Poppies by Amitav Ghosh.
Sea of Poppies is a ripping yarn that races along, sweeping the reader with it. Amitav Ghosh’s historical novel is set in 1838, on the eve of the first Opium War when the British were planning to resist Chinese restrictions on the lucrative opium trade.
A group of disparate characters is assembled on board the Ibis, a former slaving schooner (a so-called "black-birder"). The ship’s mission is to transport indentured Indian workers – girmitiyas – from Calcutta to Mauritius.
The jahaj-bhais (ship-brothers) include:
- Deeti, a widowed opium grower;
- her devoted lover-protector, Kalua;
- the second mate, Zachary Reid, a mulatto freedman from Baltimore;
- the bankrupt Raja Neel Rattan Halder, who forges a friendship with
- a Chinese opium addict, Ah Fatt;
- Paulette Lambert, a Frenchwomen evading her odious British guardian, the influential merchant Benjamin Burnham;
- Paulette’s foster-brother, Jodu;
- Serang Ali, leader of the lascars (deckhands); and
- Burnham’s gomusta, Baboo Nob Kissin, a disciple of Ma Taramony, suffused with her spirit.
It has been suggested that the European characters are stereotypes. Certainly they are bigoted and objectionable, but there is a worrying ring of truth in the depictions.
Ghosh litters his texts with unfamiliar vocabulary: Indian words, Anglo-Indian colloquialisms, slang expressions, nautical terms and traders’ argot. Some may find this distracting, but it’s fun to go with the flow!
Be warned: Sea of Poppies is the first part of a trilogy, so you will not find any neat resolutions at the end of the volume; however, this exciting romp will almost certainly leave you wanting more!
Content last updated: 14/07/2009
About our expert
Stephanie Forward is Senior Tutor in Open Studies in the Centre for Lifelong Learning at the University of Warwick, and is an Associate Lecturer with The Open University. Her publications include Dreams, Visions and Realities; Sex, Social Purity and Sarah Grand (with Ann Heilmann), and the CD script for Blenheim Palace: The Churchills and their Palace.
Stephanie has been involved in two significant OU/BBC projects: The Big Read (2003) and the television series The Romantics (2006). She also leads the Open2 bookclub.








