Pages: 304 (Paperback) ISBN: 0140274235 Pub: Penguin Books Ltd Pub date: 1998-09-03 Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 9752
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Reader Reviews:Heavy going (0/0 people found this helpful)While the themes of this novel (largely racism and prejudice) are, sadly, apparently timeless, I didn't feel this novel had aged particularly well. The narrative style is definitely `of its age' which, for a modern reader, might be too slow and objective - too divorced from its content, making what should be a heart-rending, heart-stopping story just a bit of a drag. I don't feel this is an inevitable result of the age of the novel. Other classics - many much older, such as Dickens or Austen - retain an immediacy and a humanity across the decades, even centuries. But A Passage to India is - in style - much as it is in content: a study of a stuffier time. East and West Can Never Meet? (1/1 people found this helpful)Almost a century after the book's publication the most crucial problems it discussed are as current as they were during Forster's life. The impossibility of communicating across the divide of culture, religion, and race, seems to be even more alive then when he saw it. The value of the novel lies not so much in representing it but in the fact that Forster offers a way out - personal contact. There is little chance people will suddenly like Muslims, Pakistanis, gays, lesbians, Moroccans, Turkish, Kurds etc etc - there is a chance (a very slim chance, Forster would be quick to add) that an American and a Muslim, a Turk and a Kurd, an Israeli and a Palestinian can be friends. The world may not want it, the people that surround them may not want it but the results depend on us alone. If we do not try we only have ourselves to blame. Passage to India (0/0 people found this helpful)E.M Forster's classic novel is a savage critique of English colonial attitudes towards the Indian 'subject race' during the British Raj. Having then visited India with his friend Syed Masood - whom this book's principle character is said to be loosely based on - Forster was well-equipped to expose the hypocrasy and racism of Anglo-India.
Really Difficult Read (2/9 people found this helpful)I found this incredibly heavy going. The story emerges at a snails pace and is only after about half way through that I felt any interest in the story or the characters. The latter part of the book descends into real tedium.
Amazing Author, Amazing Book (2/4 people found this helpful)I picked this book out of a list of hundreds for an AP Literature class partly because if had a lot of references on the AP test: I'm so glad I did.
Similar ProductsTo the Lighthouse (Wordsworth Classics) Heart of Darkness Things Fall Apart (Penguin Red Classics) A Passage to India: York Notes Advanced Howards End (Penguin Twentieth Century Classics) CategoriesAmazon.co.uk places this book into the following categories:
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