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83%
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Great
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Named a Most Anticipated Book of 2024 by Foreign Policy, Literary Hub, and The Millions
Ghosh unravels the impact of the opium trade on global history and in his own family―the climax of a yearslong project.
When Amitav Ghosh began the research for his monumental cycle of novels the Ibis Trilogy, he was startled to learn how the lives of the nineteenth-century sailors and soldiers he wrote about were dictated not only by the currents of the Indian Ocean but also by the precious commodity carried in enormous quantities on those currents: opium. Most surprising of all, however, was the discovery that his own identity and family history were swept up in the story.
Smoke and Ashes is at once a travelogue, a memoir, and an essay in history, drawing on decades of archival research. In it, Ghosh traces the transformative effect the opium trade had on Britain, India, and China, as well as the world at large. The trade was engineered by the British Empire, which exported Indian opium to sell to China to redress their great trade imbalance, and its revenues were essential to the empire's financial survival. Following the profits further, Ghosh finds opium central to the origins of some of the world's biggest corporations, of America's most powerful families and prestigious institutions (from the Astors and Coolidges to the Ivy League), and of contemporary globalism itself.
Moving deftly between horticultural history, the mythologies of capitalism, and the social and cultural repercussions of colonialism, in Smoke and Ashes Ghosh reveals the role that one small plant has had in making our world, now teetering on the edge of catastrophe.
"It’s absolutely staggering that we don’t acknowledge that opium was absolutely at the heart, at the foundations of modern capitalism...How has all of this come to be forgotten? I mean how does it fall to a novelist but to try and put all that stuff together?"
"I’m so glad I did read this superb book. The British Empire takes its beating – a just one – but its role is not as the masterful dark overlord, more a useful villain in a serious play about human weakness and arrogance in the face of inanimate forces."
"Ghosh occasionally stumbles, according the opium poppy an unwarranted sense of agency as a player in world history. Even so, as a skilled storyteller, he triumphs in laying out the shame of the British empire’s opium trade for all to see."