The story of India's home front in the Second World War, as told by the many lost voices of Indian soldiers and civilians
Yasmin Khan is a British writer and historian. She is an Associate Professor of History at the University of Oxford and a Fellow of Kellogg College. Her first book, The Great Partition- The Making of India and Pakistan, won the Gladstone Prize from the Royal Historical Society in 2007 and was longlisted for the Orwell Prize in 2008.
Exceptional...balances analysis, history and human compassion in a
narrative that leaves one shaken
*Daily Telegraph*
Almost impossible to put down
*New Statesman*
The Second World War is one of the most written-about episodes in
all world history: every month sees a dozen new titles published.
Yet, astonishingly, The Raj at War breaks new ground on almost
every page
*Spectator*
A striking example of people’s history, packed with anecdotes,
memories and information about a shared but largely unwritten
global past
*Guardian*
Unprecedented in scope...rich both in detail and in its unique
insights... Khan's history has paved the way for a more complex
understanding of the Second World War as India's War
*Indian Express*
A fascinating, vividly written history full of surprises, some of
them shocking
*The Times*
Yasmin Khan...offers a richly researched social history of wartime
India that is peppered with fascinating detail
*The Economist*
Remarkable Account… Compassionate, judicious and brilliantly
readable, this is a compelling account of a dramatic, but little
examined, aspect of history
*Daily Mail*
This fascinating book tells the story of World War Two's impact on
India: the shattering of the ordered relations which underpinned
the Raj making its end inevitable. It's also a much needed reminder
of India's contribution to that war
*Mark Tully*
This fascinating book tells the story of World War Two's impact on
India: the shattering of the ordered relations which underpinned
the Raj making its end inevitable. It's also a much needed reminder
of India's contribution to that war
*Mark Tully*
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