In My Hands Today…

The Pindar Diamond – Katie Hickman

In a small town on the Italian coast, a mysterious woman washes ashore. She is crippled, mute, and clutches a bundle to her chest—a baby the townspeople insist is a real-life mermaid. It can only bring bad luck; they pay a troupe of acrobats to carry mother and child away.

In the bustling trade center of Venice, merchant Paul Pindar is the subject of his colleagues’ concern. Since his return from Constantinople, they have found him changed; raging over the loss of his beloved, Celia, he has gambled away his fortune at the gaming tables. But when a priceless blue diamond surfaces in the city, Pindar recognizes the opportunity to regain everything he has lost—including, perhaps, the woman he loves.

In My Hands Today…

The Feast of Roses (Taj Mahal Trilogy #2) – Indu Sundaresan

The love story of Emperor Jahangir and Mehrunnisa, begun in the critically praised debut novel The Twentieth Wife, continues in Indu Sundaresan’s The Feast of Roses. This lush new novel tells the story behind one of the great tributes to romantic love and one of the seven wonders of the world — the Taj Mahal.

Mehrunnisa, better known as Empress Nur Jahan, comes into Jahangir’s harem as his twentieth and last wife. Almost from the beginning of her royal life she fits none of the established norms of womanhood in seventeenth-century India.

Mehrunnisa is the first woman Jahangir marries for love, at the “old” age of thirty-four. He loves her so deeply that he eventually transfers his powers of sovereignty to her.

Power and wealth do not come easily to Mehrunnisa — she has to fight for them. She has a formidable rival in the imperial harem, Empress Jagat Gosini, who has schemed and plotted against Mehrunnisa from early on. Mehrunnisa’s problems do not just lie within the harem walls, but at court, too, as she battles powerful ministers for supremacy. These ministers, who have long had Emperor Jahangir’s confidence and trust, consider Mehrunnisa a mere woman who cannot have a voice in the outside world.

Mehrunnisa combats all of this by forming a junta of sorts with three men she can rely on — her father, her brother, and Jahangir’s son Prince Khurram. She demonstrates great strength of character and cunning to get what she wants, sometimes at a cost of personal sorrow when she almost loses her daughter’s love. But she never loses the love of the man who bestows this power upon her — Emperor Jahangir. The Feast of Roses is a tale of this power and love, the story of power behind a veil.

Taj Mahal Trilogy

In My Hands Today…

Madame Tussaud: A Novel of the French Revolution – Michelle Moran

Paris 1788

Marie is a young woman in love with her oldest friend and neighbour, Henri. But she is also a determined businesswoman, eager to see her family’s waxwork museum keep them safe and solvent.

Her gift for modelling faces in wax brings her to Versailles, where she must teach the king’s sister her skill. But the coming revolution will place Marie, her family and all of Paris in grave danger.

As the monarchy is overthrown and the guillotine becomes a fixture in life, Marie is expected to show her patriotism by making death masks from the severed heads of key figures killed as the Reign of Terror begins and France enters its darkest hour.

How will Marie survive the Revolution? Who will survive it with her? And just how will she come to be known as the woman behind one of the most famous museums in the world?

In My Hands Today…

River of Smoke – Amitav Ghosh

(Second book of the Ibis triology, sequel to Sea of Poppies)

In September 1838 a storm blows up on the Indian Ocean and the Ibis, a ship carrying a consignment of convicts and indentured labourers from Calcutta to Mauritius is caught up in the whirlwind. When the seas settle, five men have disappeared – two lascars, two convicts and one of the passengers. Did the same storm upend the fortunes of those of the Anahita, am opium carrier heading towards Canton? And what fate befell those abroad the Redruth, a sturdy two-masted brig heading east out of Cornwell? Was it the storm that altered their course or were the destinies of these passengers at the mercy of even more powerful forces?

On the grand scale of a historical epic, River of Smoke follows its storm-tossed characters to the crowded harbours of China. There, despite efforts of the emperor to stop them, ships from Europe and India exchange their cargoes of opium for boxes of tea, silk, porcelain and silver. Among them are Barham Modi, a wealthy Parsi opium merchant out of Bombay, his estranged half-Chinese son Ah Fatt, the  orphaned Paulette and a motley collection of others whose pursuit of romance, riches and a legendary rare flower has thrown them together. All struggle to cope with their losses – and for some, unimaginable freedoms – in the alleys and crowded waterways of nineteenth-century Canton. As transporting and mesmerising as an opiate-induced dream, River of Smoke will soon be heralded as a masterpiece of twenty-first century literature.