The Tea Planter's Daughter is the first book written by Janet MacLeod Trotter that I have read. I love books set in India and Trotter has written a four book series called the India Tea Book Series. I am planning on reading them all. In The Tea Planter's Daughter, the first book of the series, 18 year old Clarissa Belhaven resides in the Assam region of India. Her family's tea plantation is slowly going out of business and her father, the owner of the plantation, is grieving the sudden loss of his wife. Clarissa's younger sister Olive needs a mother and Clarissa provides her with motherly care. Being beautiful and headstrong, Clarissa attracts the attention of the young and brash Wesley Robson, a rival tea planter. Before his intentions become fully clear, tragedy befalls the Belhaven family and the sisters must sell their plantation. They move to Tyneside, an industrial town in England, which is vastly different from Assam. In order to start over, Clarissa has to endure extreme poverty as she finds employment in a pub and is worked to the bone by her bosses. Olive must also begin working and helps out with household work in the pub owner's home.
I enjoyed this story but expected at least half of it to take place in India. Most of it takes place in England and the English setting has never appealed to me. It is cold, grey and rainy like the city I live in. Escape to a warm weather place is ideal. That said, the plot premise is good and it was executed well. I remained interested in the story while reading as the quick pace moved the action along nicely.
The two sisters were appealing characters. I could feel their pain when they lost their home in India and had to move to a foreign land. I couldn't help but root for them. The Robson family provided the villains for the novel. For Clarissa, she both despised and secretly loved one of them, the handsome Wesley. They met in India where Wesley was running his family's tea estate but their lives also crossed many times in England, providing the book's drama.
4 out of 5 stars.
No comments:
Post a Comment