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Member Reviews

This is the first time I have read this author. The story is set against the events leading up to partition in India. The characters are well developed and the reader gets a real sense of the issues some of the English are having to deal with. Many of them have spent a large part of their life working and living in India with their families. Some of them are empathic to the needs of the Indian situation. Others not so. The book also tells a parallel story of a couple who have returned from India to settle in Newcastle and the problems and difficulties they have to face. The story has substance and you feel the author is writing from the heart. I enjoyed the story very much so will probably look out for other books by Janet Macleod Trotter!

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I truly enjoyed the ARC of The Secrets of the Tea Garden by Janet MacLeod Trotter provided by NetGalley. I felt immersed in the time period and had difficulty leaving the story behind to return to my own reality! Though this is the 4th book in the series, it is written so that you don't need to have read the previous ones in order to understand what is happening. In fact, I didn't even realize I had missed the other books! I really enjoyed the "forbidden" love storyline and the modern thinking exhibited by the characters. They challenged the norms of being the colonizing Nation and I identified with Libby by being in a mixed race relationship myself. Looking forward to bringing this series into the store!

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Received a vopy of this book through netgalley.
Wonderful read, have read the previous books in the series,so it eas goof to catch up eith the lives of the other characters.You do not need to read the previous books to understand the story as it clearly explains the role of the characters from the previous books.
A must read.

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It’s not until after the end of World War II that Libby is able to leave chilly England to return to her real home – India. It’s as beautiful ss she remembers, but now a current of discord is humming. The time of Colonial rule is coming to a close. Libby’s father owns a tea plantation and even though she loves it and has fond memories of her childhood there, she begins to realize that, while her world may be perfect, the life of those around her, her employees and the local population live very different lives. I love Trotter’s tea series, they embody the beauty and cruelty of India and the lives of those who love her

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