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Flood of Fire: Ibis Trilogy Book 3 Hardcover – 28 May 2015

4.5 out of 5 stars 61 customer reviews

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Frequently Bought Together

  • Flood of Fire: Ibis Trilogy Book 3
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  • River of Smoke: Ibis Trilogy Book 2
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Product details

  • Hardcover: 624 pages
  • Publisher: John Murray; First Edition edition (28 May 2015)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0719569001
  • ISBN-13: 978-0719569005
  • Product Dimensions: 16.4 x 5.3 x 23.6 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (61 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 63,558 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Product Description

Review

A masterpiece . . . Flood of Fire is not just a work of literary imagination but also an exercise in deep and original historical reflection (Chris Clark, author of Sleepwalkers)

For the past weeks, [Amitav Ghosh] has been holed up in his Goa home, putting the finishing touches to Flood of Fire, the third part of his epic Ibis trilogy. The project has taken a decade. The three novels, starting with Sea of Poppies . . . have cemented his reputation (Financial Times)

Totally absorbing (Literary Review)

As ever for Mr Ghosh, language is a great tumasher, and it is not surprising that he is on the shortlist for the biennial Man Booker International Prize . . . He swims with relish in a lexicon he has made his own, a rich brew of English, Bangla, Hindi, Parsi, Malay, Cantonese and pidgin at a time when free trade and imperialism were recombining Asian cultures and tongues . . . Mr Ghosh's genius is to paint this world from its teeming heart, rather than from the perspective of metropolitan centres of power in London, or, for that matter, Peking (The Economist)

It is a testimony to Ghosh's great skills that he can both teach us history and create believable fictional characters . . . What makes Ghosh's characters come alive all the more is the use of language . . . Ghosh, occasionally, translates, but often does not, yet pulls off this presentation of the medley of tongues his characters use with great aplomb (Mihir Bose Independent)

The final instalment of an extraordinary trilogy . . . Ghosh's story roars along, constantly flipping between high seriousness and low humour. It is simultaneously wrong-footing and delightful, riveting and diverting . . . His expansive trilogy has, in fact, advanced his story by only a few years; but the ground it has covered is almost immeasurable (Guardian)

Ghosh's scrupulous depiction of army life is just one part of this tour de force of historical description. Together, the novels are a weighty and precious chronicle of those times, a compendium of lost habits, languages and attitudes . . . Flood of Fire has all the romance, subterfuge and ingenious plotting to keep Ghosh's audience firmly lagowed. But it is the integrity of his historical vision that will ensure his books outlast other literary dumbpokes (FT Weekend)

The best bits of the trilogy, however, do not merely satirize the greed and hypocrisy of the foreign traders; but allow crosscurrents of sympathy . . . full of unforgettable vignettes (The Spectator)

A huge, sprawling, rumbustious novel . . . rich and engrossing . . . a splendid adventure story, full of rich and varied characters and romantic entanglements . . . In the last chapters Amitav Ghosh pulls the strings of his enthralling trilogy together. It's a remarkable achievement: an adventure novel full of feeling, but one which also invites - even compels - you to think about the assumptions which men act upon (Scotsman)

The star of the proceedings is the historical detail that really brings it all alive. Anyone who knows me knows my love of historical factoids and Amitav provides enough for us to luxuriate in them. The difference between the treatment of British and Indian soldiers, the colonial structure, the importance of China and the opium fields, not to mention the rituals surrounding taking opium - it's all here with much more besides, simultaneously entertaining and educating. I will definitely be going back to the beginning of the trilogy and look forward to catching up (Bookbag)

Amply justifying the hype and expectation, this is a thrillingly realised and richly populated novel, imbued with a wealth of historical detail, suffused with the magic of place and plotted with great verve: Flood of Fire is a beautiful novel in its own right, and a compelling conclusion to an epic and sweeping story, one of the greatest literary works of our time. For Amitav Ghosh, the glittering literary prizes beckon (Nudge Book)

Graphic and gripping (New Statesman)

A terrific read. I wish Amitav Ghosh could live forever, like Ganesh, the Hindu patron god of writers and complete what he once planned. Flood of Fire, alas, will have to do (The Times)

If you fancy a rip-roaring story with history, an erudite critique of colonialism, funny and full of contemporary parallels, you could try Amitav Ghosh's third in his Ibis trilogy, Flood of Fire (i)

Flood of Fire sweeps Amitav Ghosh majestically to the pinnacle of historical fiction writers and fittingly completes his Ibis trilogy . . . Ghosh has long set a standard for the kind of fine historical fiction writing that paints perfect pictures of what life was like for ordinary people as the world changed around them at breakneck pace. What sets him apart from other writers in this genre is his knowledge of the subject and his detailed descriptions and minute detail (Dundee Courier)

Unexpectedly comic (Sunday Times)

Ghosh's ebullient fluency in the colorful argot of the contentious worlds he brings forth distinguishes this passionately researched series as much as his wily and zealous exposure of entrenched discrimination pertaining to race, religion, gender, caste, and class. Once again Ghosh proves himself to be a virtuoso scene-setter and action writer . . . This feverishly detailed, vividly panoramic, tumultuous, funny, and heartbreaking tale offers a vigorous conclusion to Ghosh's astutely complex and profoundly resonant geopolitical saga (Booklist)

A rip roaring story rich with history, an erudite critique of colonialism, funny and full of contemporary parallels (Independent)

Sweeps Amitav Ghosh majestically to the pinnacle of historical fiction writers (Oxford Times)

Exuberant (Guardian)

This doorstopper of a novel, thick as curry with Anglo-Indian patois and with a bundle of rattlingly good narratives, makes one desperate that he does continue (The Times, Books of the Year)

A rollicking wordfest that sprawls across land, sea, social class and ethnicities, sweeping us along in its narrative drive (Guardian)

By an ingenious hotchpotch of different languages and registers, Ghosh's story roars along, constantly flipping between high seriousness and low humour. It is simultaneously wrong-footing and delightful (Guardian)

Book Description

The final book in the bestselling Ibis trilogy from the author of Booker-shortlisted Sea of Poppies.

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Format: Kindle Edition
Flood of Fire is a giant of a book and a fitting conclusion to the truly astonishing Ibis trilogy. It's an enthralling and exciting read, set against the backdrop of the standoff between East and West which led to the Opium Wars and the British acquisition of Hong Kong. The events resulted in China's capitulation and humiliation as it tried to prevent greedy, opportunistic foreigners from plying their cargoes of opium.

The narrative meanders with ease across the years, drawing together historic events, the main and various subplots and a vast array of colourful and compelling characters. The subject matter is sensitive. Colonialism is raging and Europeans are happy to exploit people for profit. Amitav Ghosh explores this and other difficult themes with compassion and without judgement. The reader is able to view events from the standpoint of various characters and form their own conclusion about the integrity or otherwise of some attitudes and actions.

Ghosh brings an incredible energy to his writing. There are so many stories and people to follow and every voice is different. Although much of the dialogue uses unfamiliar language and sentence structure, it's easy to follow and has a cadence that sweeps the reader along. I'm left feeling that I actually knew some of the people; Zachary, for example, a mixed race American is memorable. His dalliance with Mrs Burnham provides some of the best comic writing I've ever read. Ghosh also captures custom, conflict and intrigue. It's easy to relate to Kesri Singh, an incidental character in earlier volumes comes to the fore so that we can understand how and why he joined the Army, but at what cost?

There are so many strands at the start of this tale, it's difficult to see how they will all come together.
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I was reasonably familiar with Amitav Ghosh's earlier novels, having enjoyed in particular The Glass Palace and The Hungry Tide. With the Ibis trilogy he is painting on a broader canvas, with the events leading up to and including the First Opium War. Flood of Fire draws together the strand from the first two novels powerfully. First of all it is clear that Ghosh has researched the historical background extensively and meticulously. However this is a novelist's work and not just a history. The characters are strongly drawn; they are so three-dimensional that the reader develops an almost personal involvement in their fates. Ghosh doesn't ignore the ugliness and corruption of colonialism, its patriarchal nature and its contempt for the "subject races". But he manages to be dispassionate enough to focus on the novelist's primary duty - to tell a story. Best book I've read in a while.
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Ghost writes stories that are big in scale and ideas. I like the way he starts with four different stories and then binds them together in a single cord. However this, the final volume of the Ibis trilogy, is so long in time since the first, published 2008, that I struggled to remember much of what went before. A 'story so far' introduction would have enriched the reading of volume 3, the more so as several names change in the course of the tale. A glossary of some of the numerous non-English words would have helped this monogamy too!
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I read the first two books of the trilogy and put down an advanced order for this, the third. Loved them all. Very interesting stories and characters - not just one story but lots of them involving characters that came and went and the narrative could have followed any of them and still made compelling books. The language was not always easy to understand (especially in the first book) but I got used to it after a while and when I didn't understand fully I made up my own explanations and it worked. I knew nothing about the Opium Wars of the 1800's and now looking for more information about them. The detail was superb and I felt I was really there - what selfish, cruel people my British ancestors of the 1800's were. The research was extensive and I read all the notes at the end of the books as they were just as compelling as the story. Recommending it to everyone.
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This book was definitely worth the wait. Time flew by reading this book. Continuing the story of the 1st Opium War, the side plots cover the life of a Sepoy within the British East India Company and the on-going story of an Indian Aristocrat cheated out of his property by an English merchant. A new twist to the plot is the transformation of a previous minor heroic figure into one of the stories villains through the influence of free trade capitalism. I was disappointed that this change took place so easily that it became questionable whether this was in character with the way this character was portrayed in the earlier books.
Due to the events of the war, the book at time can feel like an episode of "Sharp", but this time sharp is fighting for the baddies. The up side of this is the pace of the action. The down side is that some strands of the story, from the earlier two books, remain untied. The story of indentured labour alluded to, in the first book, as being something that would be explained later, was not completed.
In conclusion this book was a great end to the trilogy but in keeping the story down to just three books there were too many loose ends.
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