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At the age of five Duleep Singh became the last Maharajah of the Sikh kingdom of the Punjab. He was still a child when the British annexed the Punjab in 1849 and forced him to sign a punitive treaty. He was made to give up his throne and surrender the Koh-i-noor diamond to Queen Victoria, but was allowed to keep his title. Duleep Singh spent most of his adult life exiled in England. As a married man, he lived in Elveden Hall, Suffolk, turning his house into an Indian palace and the grounds into a famous shooting estate where he entertained the future Edward VII. Embittered by his treatment at the hands of the British government, he finally sold his estate and made an ill-fated attempt to recover his throne. Thwarted by the authorities, he spent his last days in Paris, separated from his family. He married again and embarked on a doomed plan to persuade the Czar of Russia to invade the Punjab. In 1893, at the age of fifty-five, he died in Paris. 'Duleep Singh's Statue' provides a concise biography of the Maharajah's colourful life, stressing the humiliations imposed by the British on the last ruler of the Sikhs. Yet Duleep Singh's legacy refused to disappear. In 1993 the Sikh community wanted to mark the centenary of the Maharajah's death. Their initial request to have a monument placed in Elveden proved controversial and was rejected. An alternative site was chosen on Butten Island in nearby Thetford. Duleep Singh's Statue tells the story of the statue and the battles fought by the Sikhs to create their monument. The statue of Duleep Singh on his horse was finally unveiled by the Prince of Wales in 1999. The Maharajah remains an important figure for Sikhs, especially those in Britain, and the Thetford statue attracts many thousands of Sikh visitors. The significance of the last Maharajah and his statue relates both to the past, when the Sikhs had their own sovereign kingdom, and the present as modern Sikhs find their identity in contemporary Britain.
Bruno is struggling to escape the loveless labyrinth in which his childhood has imprisoned him. Short and stout, his only loves are his ever-expanding library and collection of jazz records. When a statuesque and enigmatic woman strides into Bruno's life he finds himself floundering to reconcile his passion with the way her height makes him feel all the more laughable. In a series of notebooks Bruno takes us from his Liverpool childhood to the bars and brothels of 1970s Soho, Norfolk's salt marshes and finally Bohemian Biarritz. Funny and tragic, "Minotaur in Love" is the story of the mazes people build to hide their secret selves from the world.
In his homage to the infinite west that is South Dakota, both past and present, Englishman Fraser Harrison tours well-known locations such as the Badlands, Mount Rushmore, and Deadwood. But there is far more to South Dakota, and the author also spent time in less-travelled areas such as Wounded Knee, the southern portion of the Missouri River, and Harrison, his namesake town. The author's witty, conversational, and detailed commentaries are paired with brief historical accounts to form a travel memoir comparable to those of Bill Bryson, Dayton Duncan, and Paul Theroux. Harrison paints pictures with his prose that let the reader share his experiences on the roads, in the cities, and among the people of small communities that make up the Land of Infinite Variety.
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