### From Publishers Weekly In this sequel to *A Singular Hostage*, native Bostonian and Muslim convert Ali continues the saga of Marianna Givens, a young Englishwoman living in 19th-century India. Though competently written and often entertaining, the novel feels like exoticism cloaked as historica
A Beggar at the Gate
โ Scribed by Ali, Thalassa
- Book ID
- 107075709
- Publisher
- Bantam Books
- Year
- 2003
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 2 MB
- Series
- Mariana Givens 2
- Category
- Fiction
- ISBN-13
- 9780553381771
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Set in nineteenth-century British India, Thalassa Aliโs dazzling debut, A Singular Hostage, introduced us to Mariana Givens, the Englishwoman who risked everything to save a young Indian orphan from certain death. Now Ali returns to that exotic kingdom beyond the northwestern frontier, where Mariana will come face-to-face with a different destiny.
Two years have passed since Mariana left the walled city of Lahore. But sheโs unable to forget its haunting scent of roses or her ill-fated marriage to a native-born husband that has scandalized Calcutta society and made her an outcast among the English. Worse still, she bears the knowledge that she will be forced to give up Saboorโthe boy believed to be endowed with magical gifts whose life she risked her own to save.
Now Mariana must revisit Lahore to return Saboor to his family and request a divorce from Hassan Ali Khan. But how can she say good-bye to the enigmatic man whose love defied two culturesโor the child sheโs loved as her own? As political and civil strife threaten to erupt in violence, she seeks answers in a world no Englishwoman has ever seen. And sheโs driven ever closer to a secret so powerful that it will change her lifeโand the lives of those she lovesโforever.
From the Trade Paperback edition.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
### From Publishers Weekly In this sequel to *A Singular Hostage*, native Bostonian and Muslim convert Ali continues the saga of Marianna Givens, a young Englishwoman living in 19th-century India. Though competently written and often entertaining, the novel feels like exoticism cloaked as historica