Browse Books
Two lives. Vikram Seth. 2005.
Two lives. Vikram Seth. 2005.
Couldn't load pickup availability
Shanti Behari Seth was born on the eighth day of the eighth month in the eighth year of the twentieth century; he died two years before its close. He was brought up in India in the late years of the Raj, and was sent by his family in the 1930s to Berlin - though he could not speak a word of German - to study medicine and dentistry. It was here, before he migrated to Britain, that Shanti’s path first crossed that of his future wife.
Henny Gerda Caro was also born in 1908, in Berlin to a Jewish family, cultured, patriotic and intensely German. When the family decided to take Shanti as a lodger, Henny’s first reaction was, ‘Don’t take the black man!’ But a friendship flowered, and when Henny fled Hitler's Germany for England, just one month before war broke out, she was met at Victoria Station by the only person she knew in the country: Shanti.
Vikram Seth has weaved together their astonishing story: the war that took Shanti to North Africa, the Middle East and the battle of Monte Casino, where his right arm was blown off; the persecution that saw Henny desperately searching for news of her mother and sister she had left behind; the love that sparked their marriage in 1951; the courage that inspired Shanti to defy his injury and set up once again in his profession; the arrival into this childless couple’s lives of their great-nephew from India - the teenage student, Vikram Seth.
Share
