Sitaram, final novel of Bankim Chandra Chatterjee published in 1886. It tells the story of a local Hindu lord, torn between his wife and the woman he desires but unable to attain, makes a series of blunders and takes arrogant, self-destructive decisions. Author: Bankim Chandra Chattopadhyay. Publisher: Createspace Independent Publishing Platform. Publication date: September 20, 2022. Language: Bengali.
Sitaram ( Bengali Edition )
Evidently #4 in a series (I haven't read the previous 3). Historical erotic romance. A desperate Irish noblewoman journeys to London, to take up the life of a whore, in an attempt to support her 5 orphaned siblings. She encounters an unknown man who hires her to play tricks on a duke. Needless to say, she falls in love with the duke, and he with her. The trickster turns out to be... well, you'll see if you read it. A few words about dialogue: When Nia is sexually excited - "Oh hh." When she's close to orgasm - "Oh hh hh." A change-up - "Oh hh, Radford," or, "Oh hh hh, love." In the final orgasmic interlude - "Oh hh hh hh!" Nia never says anything else when in the throes of passion. Not to be outdone Radford manages to say, "Judas," "Christ," "Fuck," and, of course, the slightly changed, "Ah hh." And entirely too much squealing - "'Radford,' she squealed'" as just one example. A note about the Kindle edition: The usual types of errors - underling for underlying; corpus for copse. A little racism thrown in - "gentile feminine nose." A complete change in historic location - Vaudeville Gardens for Vauxhall Gardens.
2022-10-26 05:30