
Driving Academy 2017 Simulator
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Road signs and driving made simpler – just for you! Enroll in this virtual school of driving...

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Your ticket to the bright lights of Premier League superstardom is here! From the creators of the...

SayHi Translate
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Instantly speak another language, for free, with SayHi Translate on iOS! Have a conversation in two...

Transcendental Magic, Its Doctrine and Ritual
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2011 Reprint of 1958 London Edition. Full facsimile of the original edition, not reproduced with...

UC News - News, Cricket, Video
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Highlights: Cricket Livescore -- Get the latest cricket scores, cric info, cricket videos &...

Appy Geek – tech news
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The #1 tech news app - offering the most comprehensive daily breaking news coverage from nearly...

SpiderBeetleBee by Bill MacKay
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Drag City presents the second volume of Bill MacKay and Ryley Walker's inspired collaboration. It's...
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Puzzli - Incredible Puzzle Fun
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Over 3300 incredibly entertaining puzzles. Discover fascinating facts about the world while playing....

ClareR (5854 KP) rated Savage Beasts in Books
Jul 4, 2023
I thought it was really clever how the Greek myth was woven into Meena’s story, and showed the impact of colonialism. Great Britain doesn’t come out of this well. James’ uncle, Sir Peter Chilcott, is a powerful man in the East India Company. He’s cold, unforgiving, and sees Meena, Indians, Bengali’s, and anyone from anywhere foreign, as below him and little better than an animal.
It made for really uncomfortable reading, and made me so angry!
Meena comes across as being so young but desperate to be older. She’s determined to make a good life for herself and her child - despite how difficult James and his reprehensible family make it for her.
Honestly, by the end I firmly believed they deserved whatever was coming their way!
I listened to this on audiobook, kindly sent to me via NetGalley by HarperCollins UK Audio. The narrator, Shazia Nicholls, really was outstanding. It always amazes me how a good narrator can make all the characters sound so different - especially in this case, the men. Sir Peter came across as a sneering, superior, calculating monster, and in contrast, Meena was both young and wise - and it felt as though she was really there, speaking for herself. Shazia read with such emotion that it became entirely believable. This could well have been an historical memoir as much as a piece of fiction.
Yes, this is described as a Greek retelling, but it has been made into something all of its own. If you know the story of Medea, then you’ll see where in particular it is borrowing from that story - but this is a great story in its own right. It’s powerful, feminist and it’s about colonialism. It’s a story about family, trust and the devastation of betrayal.
Highly recommended!

Learning from Delhi: Dispersed Initiatives in Changing Urban Landscapes
Maurice Mitchell, Bo Tang and Shamoon Patwari
Book
The inflexibility of modern urban planning, which seeks to determine the activities of urban...