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The Jam Fruit Tree

Front Cover
10 Reviews
Penguin Books, 1993 - Fiction - 210 pages
Winner Of The Gratiean Memorial Prize For The Best Work In English Literature By A Sri Lankan For 1993
Hilarious, Affectionate, Candid And Moving, This Is The Story Of The Burghers Of Sri Lanka&

Who Are The Burghers? Descended From The Dutch, The Portuguese, The British And Other Foreigners Who Arrived In The Island-Nation Of Sri Lanka (And Mingled With The Local Inhabitants), The Burghers Often Stand Out Because Of Their Curiously Mixed Features-Grey Eyes In An Otherwise Dravid Face, For Instance.... A Handsome And Guileless People, The Burghers Have Always Lived It Up, Forever Willing To Put A Party .

Carl Muller, A Burgher Himself, Writes In This Quasi-Fictional, Engaging Biography Of The Lives Of His People; They Emerge, At The End Of His Story, As A Race Of Fun-Loving, Hardy People, Much Like The Jam Fruit Tree Which Simply Refuses To Be Contained Or Destroyed.

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Review: The Jam Fruit Tree (The Burgher Trilogy, Book 1)

User Review  - Prasanna - Goodreads

Blunt, filthy, and unapologetic. A mixture of fiction and fact, referred to him as 'faction', this book is the beginning of his Burgher Trilogy. The story itself is a thinly veiled retelling of his ... Read full review

Review: The Jam Fruit Tree (The Burgher Trilogy, Book 1)

User Review  - Chaminda Peries - Goodreads

January 28, 2013 By Chaminda Peries A friend of mine, bought me this book because I told him that I had started to read books written by Sri Lankan authors. A bit of a rare breed. I enjoyed this book ... Read full review

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