The Gunpowder Widow: Saltpeter, Smoke, and the Rajput Woman Who Armed Two Sides of the Same War (eBook)

The Gunpowder Widow: Saltpeter, Smoke, and the Rajput Woman Who Armed Two Sides of the Same War (eBook)

Sunita Rathore
Sunita Rathore
Prezzo:
€ 8,99
Compra EPUB
Prezzo:
€ 8,99
Compra EPUB

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EPUB
Cloud: Scopri di più
Compatibilità: Tutti i dispositivi
Lingua: Inglese
Editore: Umar
Codice EAN: 9798235458000
Anno pubblicazione: 2026
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Descrizione

THE GUNPOWDER WIDOW She didn't choose sides. She chose her brother's life. Rajputana, 1550. The wars of an empire eat men the way fire eats dry wood — fast, indifferent, and without memory of what stood there before. Meera Rathore knows this better than most. Her family has spent three generations turning saltpeter, charcoal, and sulfur into the black powder that loads the cannons and fills the muskets of northern India's armies. She has spent nine years learning every step of that craft beside her husband Vikram, whose hands knew the material the way a physician knows a pulse. Then Vikram dies of a fever in the night, leaving behind two young children, an aging mother-in-law, a compound full of workers, and a business that the world expects to stop functioning the moment a woman is the only one left to run it. Meera does not stop. But four months after Vikram's death, her brother-in-law Pratap is taken prisoner at a Mughal skirmish near Nagaur. The ransom is three hundred and twenty rupees — a sum that sits beyond the reach of what one garrison contract can produce in the time a man can survive captivity. Meera runs the numbers. She runs them again. The arithmetic is merciless and the conclusion is simple: the only way to raise the money fast enough is to sell her powder to both sides. To the Rajput garrison that has always been her customer. And to the Mughal commander who is fighting Rajput forces in the very hills she can see from her compound gate. What follows is not a story about compromise. It is a story about precision. About a woman who understands that she is living inside a moral problem with no clean solution, and who chooses to solve it anyway — carefully, completely, and with full knowledge of what it costs. Meera does not deceive herself about what her powder does when it leaves the compound. She knows it kills. She has always known. What she discovers, across these months of production and payment and waiting, is that knowing the cost of a thing and paying it anyway is not weakness. It is the only form of honesty available to her. This novel lives in the texture of a world that history mostly forgot to record: the workshops and account ledgers and supply chains of sixteenth-century India, the craft knowledge that passed through families in the hands rather than in books, the economic lives of women who were told their role was to grieve and who instead chose to work. It is a novel about saltpeter and about loyalty. About the difference between necessity and convenience, and the precise moment when one becomes the other. About what a family actually is when everything that held it together is gone, and what remains when you have only the work and the people and your own willingness to stand inside the consequences of your choices. Meera Rathore is not a revolutionary. She is not a rebel. She is a woman with a ledger, a compound that smells of sulfur, two children who need their uncle home, and a clarity about the world that is more frightening than any weapon she has ever made. She will arm both sides of the same war. She will buy back one life with the powder that is ending others. And she will keep the accounts — every rupee, every delivery, every cost — with the precision of someone who understands that the only way to survive an impossible situation is to see it completely. The powder does not care who it kills. She does. The Gunpowder Widow is historical fiction for readers who want their history to cut. For readers who are tired of stories in which difficult choices are made easy by narrative convenience. For readers who have ever had to choose between the right thing and the necessary thing, and who know that sometimes there is no version of the choice that leaves your hands clean. Pick it up. You will not put it down before the last page.