The Sleeping Dictionary (novel)

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First edition (publ. Gallery Books)

The Sleeping Dictionary is a novel by American writer Sujata Massey. It is the first book in the Daughters of Bengal series and was released in paperback on August 20, 2013.[1] Set in late Raj India, The Sleeping Dictionary tells the story of a young peasant girl, who makes her way to Calcutta and is caught between the raging independence movement and the British colonial society she finds herself inhabiting.

Plot[edit]

Set between 1925 and the end of World War II, The Sleeping Dictionary is the story of Kamala, who loses her family during a West Bengal cyclone. As the young orphan, an unseen child servant, grows up and learns English, she turns into a secret freedom fighter in Calcutta. While the term "sleeping dictionary" was originally coined for young women who slept with Europeans and educated them in the ways of India, Kamala turns the tables on the colonial establishment, using her talents for readings languages and men to work for India's independence.[2] This is an unusual portrait of colonial India, told in the voice of a young woman who breaks barriers of race and caste to remake her destiny.

Reception[edit]

The book received a favorable review in the Romantic Times.[3]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "The Sleeping Dictionary". Simon & Schuster.
  2. ^ "The Sleeping Dictionary by Sujata Massey". Peeking Between the Pages. Retrieved 11 September 2013.
  3. ^ "RT Book Reviews: The Sleeping Dictionary". Retrieved 11 September 2013. Readers may think of a sleeping dictionary as a mistress who teaches her master the customs and language of the country, but such is not the case with Massey's heroine, who eloquently, slowly and sometimes painstakingly relates her journey from child to revolutionary and lover. There is sadness, tragedy, joy, love and triumph — everything saga readers enjoy.

External links[edit]