Skip to content

No image available

THE NAULAHKA

No image available

THE NAULAHKA

by Kipling, Rudyard

  • Used
  • Hardcover
Condition
G++/No DW
Seller
Seller rating:
This seller has earned a 3 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
WINTERTON, Lincolnshire, United Kingdom
Item Price
£8.49
Or just £7.64 with a
Bibliophiles Club Membership
£13.00 Shipping to USA
Standard delivery: 20 to 30 days

More Shipping Options

Payment Methods Accepted

  • Visa
  • Mastercard
  • American Express
  • Discover
  • PayPal

About This Item

GB: Heinemann 1890s.. 3rd Edition. Hardback. G++/No DW.

Reviews

On Apr 6 2012, Feeney said:
Together, two young best friends, Englishman Rudyard Kipling (1865 - 1936) and American Charles Wolcott Balestier (1861 - 1891) as early as July 1890 agreed to compose together THE NAULAHKA - A STORY OF WEST AND EAST. While this collaborative novel was being published in nine monthly installments in New York in The Century Magazine (November 1891 - July 1892), Wolcott Balestier died suddenly of typhoid fever in December 1891. *** Scholars are not in complete agreement about the relative roles of Kipling and Balestier in their novel about two young Coloradans Nicholas Tarvin and Kate Sheriff who sail off separately and for different reasons to the deserts of Rajputana, India for a few months of altruism (nurse Kate), greed and Colorado home town boosterism (Nicholas), and for adventure and danger (both). *** On learning in Lahore, India while visiting his parents, of Wolcott Balestier's unexpected death, Kipling rushed back to London, marrying Wolcott's sister Caroline "Carrie" ten days after arrival. For all future magazine issues (January to July 1892), and for the hardcover publications and revisions, Rudyard Kipling became solely responsible. ***The novel was made into a silent feature film in 1918 that follows the original novel fairly closely. It is possible to regard THE NAULAHKA (a numerical allusion "Nine-Lakhs" = 900,000) as a late nineteenth century predecessor of today's highly popular American literary genre, the "Christian Romance." In the latter genre the basic plot runs: gorgeous young Christian maiden loves Adonis-like pagan man. After vicissitudes maiden brings pagan to Jesus and all ends well. ***In THE NAULAHKA (the name of a fabulous necklace valued centuries earlier at nine lakhs/900,000 rupees whose centerpiece is a black diamond), there is a twist on the Christian Romance motif. Diminutive Kate Sheriff, while in boarding school in St. Louis, had heard a lecture by Pundita Ramabai, a visiting Hindu woman, about "the sad case of her sisters at home." Kate was instantly transformed: God wanted her to go as a medical missionary to India. After two years very hard, intense study she was an accredited nurse and came home to Topaz, Colorado, to say goodbye to her affluent parents. *** While there, local insurance salesman, property speculator, entrepreneur and rising politician, dashing young Nicholas Tarvin tried every formidable wile he knew to make Kate stay home in Colorado and marry him (they had known each other since childhood). But Kate traveled East alone to a Presbyterian mission in a forlorn princely state in Imperial British Rajputana, north of Bombay. *** Republican Party man Nick was in the middle of a winning campaign, ultimately overwhelmingly defeating Kate's easy-going Democratic Party father for a seat in the Colorado legislature. Suddenly a powerful railroad tycoon visited two nearby boom towns competing for his business. Nicholas Tarvin then cultivated and promised Mrs. Mutrie, the magnate's young wife, that he would bring her back the fabulous Naulahka and she in return would win her dotng husband's consent to turn Nick's home town Topaz into the centerpiece of a new north-south CC&C railroad line. *** That done, Nick speeds 14,000 miles west to India, beating the unsuspecting Kate by a few days to the princely city of Rhatore. The rest of the story tells the steps that Nick takes to find and secure the great necklace the Naulahka while nurse Kate keeps the Maharajah's eldest son alive despite the machinations of the all-powerful although only the newest and most junior (of 300 in the harem) royal wife, a murderous gypsy named Sitabhai. In a plot worthy of Indiana Jones, the young Americans face and survive plots to murder them both. Nick persuades the Maharajah to divert a river and pan for gold. The Raj's local British representative goes along with that development scheme to modernize the princely state of Gokral Seetarun. How can all this possibly turn out well for Christian maiden and her mostly amoral hustler lover? Read THE NAULAKHA and find out! *** There is a passing similarity to Kipling's long short story or novella of 1888, "The Man Who Would Be King," in which two British con men make themselves (briefly) rulers in Kaffiristan not far outside the British Raj. In THE NAULAHKA two late 19th Century Americans try for different personal reasons (she for God and he to make her his wife) and with varying degrees of success and failure to bring American know-how and hustle during a half-year or so to a hot desert British Indian princely kingdom and to its half-heartedly scheming but lethargic ruling class.-OOO-

(Log in or Create an Account first!)

You’re rating the book as a work, not the seller or the specific copy you purchased!

Details

Bookseller
Richard Sylvanus Williams (Est 1976) (Bookdealer) GB (GB)
Bookseller's Inventory #
k007D.022
Title
THE NAULAHKA
Author
Kipling, Rudyard
Format/Binding
Hardcover
Book Condition
Used - G++
Jacket Condition
No DW
Edition
3rd Edition
Publisher
Heinemann
Place of Publication
GB

Terms of Sale

Richard Sylvanus Williams (Est 1976) (Bookdealer)

Guarantee: Providing notification is received within seven days of receipt of an order a full refund (including postage) will be paid for any book found not to be as described. Please notify first only return books at my request. POSTING DETAILS We will post books direct to a customer's principal or card-holder BUT PLEASE NOTE when books are sent to any other address or to a third party the order is treated as A TRADE ORDER and is sent AT CUSTOMERS RISK. ADDRESS LABELS: All parcels leaving our premises are stamped with our address UNLESS an adhesive address label with return address is supplied to us. BOOKSEARCHERS/BOOKFINDERS: Please read this carefully. We do NOT reserve books. However we will quote postage on specific books. This does not imply that the book is reserved for you but simply that at the time of the request it was listed as available on our computer. Your order will be treated as a TRADE ORDER. DISCOUNTS: If you ask for and are granted a trade discount your order with be treated as A TRADE ORDER. THESE TERMS OF SALE ARE TO BE READ IN CONJUNCTION WITH THE DISTANCE SELLING REGULATIONS (2000) UNDER WHICH YOU MAY HAVE FURTHER RIGHTS. HOWEVER PLEASE NOTE TRADE ORDERS (business to business orders) ARE EXCEPTED FROM THOSE REGULATIONS.

Shipping costs are based on books weighing 750g. If your book order is heavy or oversized, we may contact you to let you know extra shipping is required.

All books are mailed (normally within 24 hours).

Books priced at £10 or more are sent in strong cardboard bookwraps or boxes.

Cheaper books sent (within the UK) may be wrapped in polythene to speed and facilitate delivery.

Contact us if you have special packing requirements.

About the Seller

Richard Sylvanus Williams (Est 1976) (Bookdealer)

Seller rating:
This seller has earned a 3 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
Biblio member since 2010
WINTERTON, Lincolnshire

About Richard Sylvanus Williams (Est 1976) (Bookdealer)

Office open but only by prior appoinment.
tracking-