A Division of the Spoils (The Raj Quartet #4) 
The final book of the quartet and the most bitter sweet I felt. The end of The Raj in India and a time of great upheaval and drastic change. It was interesting to find out the fate of some of the characters that made this quartet so compelling and addictive.Wonderfully atmospheric, complex and interesting characters amidst a fascinating time in history. This is a series that could be read again and again. Time and money well spent.
The storyline is good but the characters did not get a proper closure. Too much time was invested in building certain characters and their endings did not feel justified.

Scott spent time in the army in the 1940s as a commissioned officer in British India. This is how he came by the material he used to write The Raj Quartet. I so far have only read the last two volumes of this work, and I want to complete the Quartet and also read "Staying On," his book about those English who stayed on in India after the British took their (bloody) hands off the Indian affairs they had so mucked up. Before England colonized India, it was a rich country. England raped it, and had
The fourth and final installment in Paul Scotts inimitable Raj Quartet , A Division of the Spoils left me breathless and shaken. Scott has done for the struggle for Indian independence what Tolstoy did for Russias Napoleonic War: it has brought it to life, given it flesh and substance, and shown its effect on the people it touched and the world at large. If there was anything worse than the dominion The British Empire exercised over the Indian continent, it was the abrupt and heartless manner
Magnificent series. If you're 'into' the period, and liked Forster's 'Passage to India' these are an absolute must.Get them all and wallow in the story, the locations, and the prose. End up with 'Staying on', which is the shortest and most poignant. (If possible, get the film as well...Celia Johnson and Trevor Howard doing an extraordinary job with the book, and providing a wonderful coda to their respective careers).
Paul Scott
Paperback | Pages: 608 pages Rating: 4.39 | 1124 Users | 74 Reviews

Define Containing Books A Division of the Spoils (The Raj Quartet #4)
| Title | : | A Division of the Spoils (The Raj Quartet #4) |
| Author | : | Paul Scott |
| Book Format | : | Paperback |
| Book Edition | : | First Edition |
| Pages | : | Pages: 608 pages |
| Published | : | May 22nd 1998 by University of Chicago Press (first published 1975) |
| Categories | : | Historical. Historical Fiction. Fiction. Cultural. India. Classics. Literature |
Interpretation During Books A Division of the Spoils (The Raj Quartet #4)
After exploiting India's divisions for years, the British depart in such haste that no one is prepared for the Hindu-Muslim riots of 1947. The twilight of the raj turns bloody. Against the backdrop of the violent partition of India and Pakistan, A Division of the Spoils illuminates one last bittersweet romance, revealing the divided loyalties of the British as they flee, retreat from, or cling to India.Present Books As A Division of the Spoils (The Raj Quartet #4)
| Original Title: | A Division of the Spoils |
| ISBN: | 0226743446 (ISBN13: 9780226743448) |
| Edition Language: | English |
| Series: | The Raj Quartet #4 |
| Characters: | Mohammed Ali Kasim, Count Bronowsky, Sarah Layton, Susan Layton, Ronald Merrick, Ahmed Kasim, Fenella Grace, Guy Perron, Leonard Purvis, Nigel Rowan, Sayed Kasim |
| Setting: | India,1945 |
Rating Containing Books A Division of the Spoils (The Raj Quartet #4)
Ratings: 4.39 From 1124 Users | 74 ReviewsDiscuss Containing Books A Division of the Spoils (The Raj Quartet #4)
The Raj Quartet - this book had been on my to-read list for a very long time, because, the rating of each of the books was more than 4, and I just couldn't understand how that was possible. What was in it, that many other series don't? Ronald Merrick - the hideous villain is the only character that appears in all four volumes, and no character takes more than 20% of the total space, yet some characters leave behind a lasting impression, and one such character is Ahmed Kasim. If 'The Jewel in theThe final book of the quartet and the most bitter sweet I felt. The end of The Raj in India and a time of great upheaval and drastic change. It was interesting to find out the fate of some of the characters that made this quartet so compelling and addictive.Wonderfully atmospheric, complex and interesting characters amidst a fascinating time in history. This is a series that could be read again and again. Time and money well spent.
The storyline is good but the characters did not get a proper closure. Too much time was invested in building certain characters and their endings did not feel justified.

Scott spent time in the army in the 1940s as a commissioned officer in British India. This is how he came by the material he used to write The Raj Quartet. I so far have only read the last two volumes of this work, and I want to complete the Quartet and also read "Staying On," his book about those English who stayed on in India after the British took their (bloody) hands off the Indian affairs they had so mucked up. Before England colonized India, it was a rich country. England raped it, and had
The fourth and final installment in Paul Scotts inimitable Raj Quartet , A Division of the Spoils left me breathless and shaken. Scott has done for the struggle for Indian independence what Tolstoy did for Russias Napoleonic War: it has brought it to life, given it flesh and substance, and shown its effect on the people it touched and the world at large. If there was anything worse than the dominion The British Empire exercised over the Indian continent, it was the abrupt and heartless manner
Magnificent series. If you're 'into' the period, and liked Forster's 'Passage to India' these are an absolute must.Get them all and wallow in the story, the locations, and the prose. End up with 'Staying on', which is the shortest and most poignant. (If possible, get the film as well...Celia Johnson and Trevor Howard doing an extraordinary job with the book, and providing a wonderful coda to their respective careers).


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