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Anila's Journey

Synopsis: In Mary Finn’s excellent debut novel Anila, a young girl with a Bengali mother and an Irish father, lives in Calcutta during the late 1700s. Her response to an advert for an apprentice draughtsman takes her on a journey up the Ganges but also in search of her missing father, the memory of her dead mother and herself.

Review: The copy I received of ‘Anila’s Journey’ was the proper published edition rather than the usual uncorrected proof and it is a lovely book – a dark rich cover with an intriguing series of overlapping images and even French flaps! The colours reminded me very strongly of my last box of very posh chocolates and the comparison remained apt because this is not a book to be gobbled at a sitting – savouring the flavour was very much part of the pleasure.

The plot unfolds in a way, which carefully reflects an age when the pace was slower, and there is much to see whilst moving through the text. The settings are vivid to the point where I felt I could smell the fruit, the streets, even the river and the emphasis on painting means that the book is rich in visual imagery as well. There was plenty of historical detail but Finn is too skilful a writer to be didactic – details about the East India Company and other aspects of Calcutta life are slotted invisibly into the plot, which twists and turns in a satisfactorily engaging way. The pages are also peopled with believable characters – even Carlen, by far the most morally ambiguous, stayed well within the boundaries of credibility.

Good historical fiction is a rare treat and to find that combined with strong characters and good plotting is very unusual indeed,. This isn’t a book for every reader, but for thoughtful and enquiring teenagers who like to stretch their comfort zones it’s a must.

Mary Hoffman's Review in The Guardian

 2008-01-22

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Listing Information
Author: Mary Finn
Genre: Historical fiction
Age Range (see age categories): 12+
Curriculum Subject: History
Theme/Subject: British colonial history, Art, India
Publisher: Walker Books
ISBN: 978-1-4063-0659-0
Reviewer: Jane Gardiner
Title: Anila's Journey
Hits: 421
Added: 2008-01-22 22:24:33
Last updated: 2008-02-09 11:36:17

Reviews (1)
Anila's Journey
Reviewed by mljensen, 2008-02-05

Anila’s journey by Mary Finn has attracted a good deal of attention for a debut novel and some good reviews. And indeed it is a tale rich in description and imagery. Growing up in Calcutta in the 1700s of mixed parentage is not an easy situation for Anila. Especially as one parent is dead and the other is missing, presumed dead. She has no means of her own and is dependent on the kindness of others and on finding employment when her gender is against her. But she has her artistic skills to help her.
The story is told in two parallel threads – the tale of Anila’s survival now and the tale of how her parents met and she lost them one after the other. The tale of the past is in italics and inevitably slows the story of the present down. I found it slightly frustrating to be taken back and forth, unable to flow completely with either story.

This is a gentle and beautiful tale for competent teen readers, but might be too dense and slow moving for the less able.

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