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[personal profile] byslantedlight

It's ages since I've started reading a book and then been 100% annoyed at the world that it won't let me just sit there and finish it all in one go, but The White Rajah by Tom Williams has totally been that book! As it was, it was there waiting for me in it's Amazon-cardboarded glory when I got home last night, and because Sir James Brooke is my new boyfriend (thank you [livejournal.com profile] foxcat74 for that rather brilliant description), and I'd already started White Rajah by Nigel Barley which is a biography of Brooke, but this was the novel of the biography of the... (well, of course it's not cos it's a novel, but it kind of is...) I had to sit down with it straight away.

And there is just something about it!

Granted, I was predisposed to be interested cos it's about Brooke, who I met at the National Portrait Gallery:

and fell in love with a bit because he's just got something, and fought pirates, and adventured around the world at the same time as all the boys I'd been researching for my defunct phd, and has curly brown hair and look at the way he's leaning on that rock! Also it turns out that he was almost certainly gay, and the novel is told from the pov of the bloke who fell in love with him... *g*

And that's the other thing about this book - it's not just a story about Brooke's adventures in Borneo, or about Williamson for that matter, it is a romance because they're shown to be totally, devotedly in love, but at the same time it's not a pile of soppy tat with one of them actually "the woman" (*headdesk* that that's even supposedly "definable"). It's their story, and it's the story of how Brooke came to be the "White Rajah" of the country of Sarawak, and it's a bit fab. It's about two people and something extraordinary that they did, and how they felt about it and dealt with it.

From the back cover:
Based on a true story, Brooke's battle is a tale of adventure set against the background of a jungle world of extraordinary beauty and terrible savagery. Told through the eyes of the man who loves him and shares his dream, this is a tale of love and loss from a 19th century world that still speaks to us today.

And it can be found here on Amazon, or if you're in the States directly from JMS Books - and ooh, look there's an extract here too... and just... go out and buy it!

Also, [livejournal.com profile] foxcat74? Next time I'm down, there's a churchyard on Dartmoor that we need to find... *g*

Date: Wednesday, 24 August 2011 06:51 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] byslantedlight.livejournal.com
Oh, I hope you like it! The m/m is on the Larton side of things rather than the "m/m romance" side of things, which is the way I like it... *g*

Date: Wednesday, 24 August 2011 09:20 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] caffyolay.livejournal.com
I'm not fussed either way to be honest, as long as it's a ripping good yarn. A bit of implied m/m romance is fine. I just checked the library catalogue but they only have the non-fiction biography not this one. Shame. But I might get that when I've cleared my library pile a bit.

Date: Wednesday, 24 August 2011 09:29 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] byslantedlight.livejournal.com
Well I thought it was a ripping good yarn, so hope you do too! *g* And mea culpa - I forgot to mention it was available on Kindle, sorry! Or I could loan you my copy, though this is one I definitely want back... *g*

Date: Wednesday, 24 August 2011 09:36 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] caffyolay.livejournal.com
No worries at all about forgetting the Kindle edition. There's no reason why you should have thought of it. I didn't either! But I've just been and nabbed a Kindle copy for £4 so I'm a happy bunny. Something to read when things quieten down a bit. :-)

Date: Wednesday, 24 August 2011 09:38 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] byslantedlight.livejournal.com
Oh, I am pleased! *g*

Hold Your Breath, Sunshine


A ship is safe in the harbour - but that's not what ships are for.

~o~

I have loved the stars too fondly to be fearful of the night. (Sarah Williams)

~o~

Could've.
Should've.
Would've.
Didn't. Didn't. Didn't.

~o~

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