Tuesday, June 16, 2026

BOOK REVIEW: Loot by Tania James

For my next read, I dove into my TBR pile and pulled out Loot by Tania James, purchased in 2023 at a local indie bookstore’s signing event.

Set largely in 18th-century India, during the reign of Tipu Sultan of Mysore, it tells the story of an automaton (which did actually exist) representing a tiger mauling an Englishman. In the novel, the automaton, commissioned by Tipu, is built by a local young woodcarver/toy maker (Abbas) and a French expat clock maker (Lucien Du Leze.) When the British attack Mysore and overthrow Tipu, the automaton is seized as spoils of war and taken to an English estate where it joins a collector’s host of artifacts from the empire.

Abbas leaves Mysore to follow Du Leze, hoping to learn more about clock- and automaton-making. The journey is more difficult than he anticipated, and the unexpected awaits him, forcing him down a different path. (I’m going for no spoilers here.)

This is an interesting novel that took me to places I’d never been before. It is told from different character viewpoints, and some of the characters appear and disappear to move the plot along, without leaving much of an emotional trace. The central characters, Abbas and Du Leze, are more deeply explored. The novel picks up at the end with a love story, the seeds of which had been planted early on.

This novel is recommended for those interested in the complex and untoward ripple effects of British colonialism.

No comments:

Post a Comment