Review: The Jam Fruit Tree (The Burgher Trilogy, Book 1)
User Review - Prasanna - GoodreadsBlunt, 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 - GoodreadsJanuary 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
Review: The Jam Fruit Tree (The Burgher Trilogy, Book 1)
User Review - Hasini - Goodreadsread this long time ago...enjoyed it thoroughly! Read full review
Review: The Jam Fruit Tree (The Burgher Trilogy, Book 1)
User Review - Neeraj - Goodreadshillllllllarrrious history of ceylon over many generations!! Read full review
Review: The Jam Fruit Tree (The Burgher Trilogy, Book 1)
User Review - Amaali - GoodreadsThe flow is so natural. Read full review
Review: The Jam Fruit Tree (The Burgher Trilogy, Book 1)
User Review - Amalie - GoodreadsI had to read it, I would say this was a shotgun reading. It was text under Sri Lankan lit where we are trying to anaylse the Burgher community. Whatever it is I'm sure the Burthers in Sri Lanka are ... Read full review
Review: The Jam Fruit Tree (The Burgher Trilogy, Book 1)
User Review - Halik - GoodreadsMuller is blunt and doesn't cut corners. His characters are always 'putting parties' and using other such 'srilankanisms' at whim. Read full review
Review: The Jam Fruit Tree (The Burgher Trilogy, Book 1)
User Review - Jagadish - GoodreadsSad and funny. Reminds one of the hundreds of Anglo-Indians of Bangalore, Calcutta and Madras... slowly going the way of the Dodo.. Read full review
Review: The Jam Fruit Tree (The Burgher Trilogy, Book 1)
User Review - Nilakshi - GoodreadsFunny. Read full review
Review: The Jam Fruit Tree (The Burgher Trilogy, Book 1)
User Review - Divakar - GoodreadsI don't know why..but this book makes me laugh and cry. It almost reads like an anthropological account of the Burger-trash in Sri Lanka. A bunch of jolly folks! Read full review