The Deceivers, John Masters
The Deceivers, John Masters
List: $25.99 | Sale: $18.20
Club: $12.99

The Deceivers

Author: John Masters

Narrator: Patrick Tull

Unabridged: 11 hr 3 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Recorded Books

Published: 11/25/2011

Categories: Fiction


Synopsis

Around a low-burning fire in a jungle clearing, a small group of late travelers huddles: a merchant, a Sikh with his son, a farmer. Silently, two men, flanking one of the travelers, crouch forward. A dirty cloth flashes momentarily and jerks around the traveler's neck. One of the men tugs the cloth, the other forces the traveler's head over to one side. Thuggee death has struck; Kali is assuaged.

About John Masters

John Masters, who was born in Calcutta in 1914, was of the fifth generation of his family to have served in India.  Educated at Wellington and Sandhurst, he returned to India in 1934 to join the 4th Prince of Wales’ Own Gurkha Rifles. He saw service in Waxiristan in 1937 and, after the outbreak of war, in Iraq, Syria and Persia. In 1944, he commanded a brigade of General Wingate’s Chindits in Burma, and later fought with the 19th Indian Division at the capture of Mandaly and on the Mawchi Road. Masters retired from the army in 1948 as a lieutenant colonel with the DSO and OBE. He went to America and turned to writing. He is best known for his novels, published by Sphere Books Ltd, most famously Bhowani Junction. John Masters died in New Mexico in May 1983, at the age of sixty-eight.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Lanea on January 28, 2009

The novel is set in India during the height of the East India Company's power. Our protagonist is an officer in the EIC, and he learns about the thuggee cult's operation in the region he's responsible for. So he set out to find and crack the cult, accidentally ends up in Kali's service, mayhem ensue......more

Goodreads review by Suzette on April 07, 2020

I thoroughly enjoyed this book. The characters were totally believable and Masters really paints a vivid picture of India in the early 1800’s. Masters evokes the feel of how India was at that time, we are taken back to an India as it was almost 200 years ago. The plot is unusual and intriguing, some......more

Goodreads review by Corto on May 31, 2015

If you can manage a healthy dose of suspension of disbelief (that a white Englishman could pass as an Indian and that an extremely widespread violent underground religion could exist for centuries without being exposed), you'll enjoy this book. Briefly, it's about the alleged cult of early-mid 19th......more

Goodreads review by Roger on April 07, 2019

I read Bhowani Junction in the early 1960s, my first introduction to the thronging Indian subcontinent. Later I was to read Forster’s Passage to India, the Raj trilogy of Paul Scott, Heat and Dust by Ruth Prawer Jhabvala,The Far Pavilions by MM Kaye, Jim Corbett’s tiger-hunting exploits, and his tho......more

Goodreads review by Thomas on December 22, 2021

A story so utterly thrilling that I finished it in a matter of days with no intention of doing so. As usual John Masters brings colonial India vividly to life, transporting the reader into a fascinating world where travel is dangerous, and murder and religion go hand in hand. Having previously read......more