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Vinieron las lluvias

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A Ranchipur, una ciudad de la India colonial, está a punto de llegar el monzón que cambiará para siempre la vida de todos sus habitantes.

779 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 1937

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About the author

Louis Bromfield

207 books101 followers
Louis Bromfield was an American author and conservationist who gained international recognition winning the Pulitzer Prize and pioneering innovative scientific farming concepts.

Bromfield studied agriculture at Cornell University from 1914 to 1916,[1] but transferred to Columbia University to study journalism. While at Columbia University, Louis Bromfield was initiated into the fraternal organization Phi Delta Theta. His time at Columbia would be short lived and he left after less than a year to go to war. After serving with the American Field Service in World War I and being awarded the Croix de Guerre and the Legion of Honor, he returned to New York City and found work as a reporter. In 1924, his first novel, The Green Bay Tree, won instant acclaim. He won the 1927 Pulitzer Prize for best novel for Early Autumn. All of his 30 books were best-sellers, and many, such as The Rains Came and Mrs. Parkington, were made into successful motion pictures.

photograph by: Carl Van Vechten

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 86 reviews
Profile Image for Denis.
Author 5 books31 followers
December 8, 2008
One of the books I enjoyed reading the most as a young adult - and which didn't disappoint when I re-read it later. A gigantic best-seller in its time, unjustly forgotten -but weirdly enough, still popular in France (another of those American novels I read in French at the time). A tale about imperial India written by a writer who deserves to be remembered - not only because he knows how to write an intelligent popular novel and tell a story packed with characters, plots, adventures and exotic landscapes, but also because he actually really has something to say about India, a country that was then at a turning point of its history. It's very melodramatic, in a spectacular way, but it works brilliantly, and it's impossible to put down. The heroine, Edwina, remains a fascinating character. And the depiction of the devastations following an earthquake and a massive flood are riveting - and very realistic.
Profile Image for Alexandra Vasiac.
75 reviews2 followers
January 8, 2015
I had this book on my shelves for almost an year now and always picked something else instead of it. I don`t know why I was reluctant, probably because of the cover which made it look like a cheap book with cheesy storyline. But I was so wrong! It was a great read and all the characters developed extraordinary. You can see in this book how people truly are, when they cannot put the masks anymore, when they are faced with real life crisis.
Also, the author did great job describing the catastrophe that hit the region, you can feel the tension and desperation that surrounds Ranchipur and you are amazed by the solidarity that people show. The most unexpected persons in the most unexpected times.
Profile Image for Miriam Cihodariu.
769 reviews166 followers
July 17, 2017
One of the most beautiful and moving narratives of India I ever read while in high-school. Back then I really was passionate about anything that had to do with India, being pretty much under the spell of Mircea Eliade:). This was one of the best novels about it, and I still think it's very well-written.

I especially like the multiple story-lines and the simple, not very in-your-face cultural otherness observations. The tragic love story also helps making the novel more moving, of course:).
Profile Image for Sergio.
1,345 reviews134 followers
February 10, 2023
Sicuramente uno dei romanzi più belli che io abbia letto! Raccontando un tremendo terremoto seguito da un'inondazione che causano lutti e devastazione, malattie e sofferenze e che isolano un piccolo stato dell'India nel periodo tra le due guerre mondiali, Bromfield narra anche e soprattutto le azioni e le reazioni morali ed emotive di tutti i protagonisti della sua storia, sia Orientali che Occidentali, mettendo a nudo tutto ciò che la civiltà, l'educazione, la posizione sociale permettono di nascondere in condizioni normali: ed é sull'orlo del baratro, in vicinanza della morte e della disfatta totale che ogni maschera viene strappata e paure ed eroismi, vigliaccherie e grettezze, atti di abnegazione e inaspettata forza d'animo individuale e collettiva salteranno fuori e permetteranno di distinguere i migliori, i generosi. Grande affresco individuale e collettivo il romanzo racconta anche affascinanti storie d'amore.
180 reviews2 followers
April 1, 2013
Louis Bromfield, a prominent author before WWII, now largely forgotten, wrote popular novels and championed organic agriculture and socialism. This long, fast moving novel, set in a princely state in India in the 1930s, follows the intersecting lives of American missionaries, British bureaucrats, Indians from all walks, and European expatriates as they cope with a severe earthquake and ensuing flood and cholera outbreak. The plot was compelling, the characters believable, and the descriptions resonant. My main quibble: too much socialist philosophizing, especially toward the end.
Profile Image for Theresa.
411 reviews47 followers
November 23, 2015
This book was an incredible read. Thank you, GR, for directing me to it, and to an author new to me. It was long, but compulsively readable, with a great cast of characters and so many insights into human nature. I just loved it!
Profile Image for Phillip Early.
Author 1 book
January 14, 2009
I finished this about a week ago. I love to read the great forgotten authors and in my opinion Bromfield is one of the best. If you enjoy reading Hemmingway, you would also love Bromfield.
Profile Image for Ermione.
314 reviews37 followers
April 15, 2016
Letto moltissimi anni fa e riletto un po' più di recente...e io molto raramente rileggo! Posso tranquillamente affermare che si tratta del MIO ROMANZO PREFERITO. Ho, come tutti, una lista di romanzi "del cuore", indimenticabili, per i quali farei grossa fatica ad immaginare una classifica; ma a questo mi sento di assegnare il primo posto.
Sono rimasta sorpresa nel non trovare nemmeno un commento all'edizione italiana su Goodreads e, quindi, - visto che ormai quella di far conoscere questo meraviglioso romanzo, inspiegabilmente fuori commercio da decenni, è diventata per me una sorta di missione - mi sono decisa a lasciare anche qui una piccola traccia, nella speranza che qualcuno abbia voglia di recuperare (nel mercato dell'usato o in qualche biblioteca) questa perla della letteratura romantica.

La vicenda si svolge nella seconda metà degli anni '30 in un immaginario principato indiano (Ranchipur) che, grazie all'opera dell'anziano sovrano e di alcuni giovani collaboratori, sta cercando di lasciarsi alle spalle arretratezza, superstizioni e discriminazioni di casta. In esso convivono la comunità indiana e quella occidentale (militari e burocrati inglesi, missionari americani), spesso divise da un muro invalicabile di incomprensioni e pregiudizi reciproci, altre volte alla ricerca di una rispettosa integrazione. La vita del paese e dei suoi abitanti viene improvvisamente sconvolta da un terremoto devastante a cui si aggiungono prima una terribile inondazione, dovuta al cedimento della diga, simbolo del progresso e della modernità cui tende l'opera riformatrice, e quindi il diffondersi di epidemie di tifo e colera. Ma Shiva, il distruttore, porta anche la rigenerazione, una rinascita che è soprattutto una rinascita dell'anima. I protagonisti del romanzo cambiano, crescono e si evolvono passando attraverso la devastazione, la morte e la malattia, lottando per la vita ma anche per risanare il proprio spirito.
Se avete visto la trasposizione cinematografica - soprattutto la versione del 1955 - dimenticatela: quel "melodrammone" non c'entra quasi nulla col romanzo e con il suo significato più profondo. Senza contare che mentre nel film i protagonisti sono Lady Heston e il dott. Safka (evidentemente l'amore tragico "vendeva di più") nel romanzo essi hanno un ruolo decisamente più marginale.
La coppia protagonista è invece formata da Tom Ransome e Fern Simon.
Lui (figlio di un conte scozzese e di un'ereditiera americana) è, all'inizio del romanzo, un uomo cinico e disincantato, "malato nell'animo", sostanzialmente nullafacente (ama dipingere) e sull'orlo dell'alcolismo, ma anche intelligente e ironico, onesto e disponibile (...nonché un figo di prim'ordine, uno di quei protagonisti impossibili da dimenticare); non è pienamente integrato nella comunità anglo-americana, di cui disprezza la grettezza e la chiusura; i suoi migliori amici sono l'affascinante medico indiano (Safka), l'anziana infermiera scozzese (McDaid), il missionario americano Smiley e sua moglie, il capo della polizia (il musulmano Rashid Alì Khan) e il rappresentante della comunità degli Intoccabili (Jobnekhar).
Fern all'inizio del romanzo è una ragazzina un po' superficiale che vive in un mondo tutto suo per sfuggire alla vita di facciata impostale dalla madre (moglie dell'altro missionario americano, decisamente più mondano di Smiley), perbenista quanto arrivista, che cerca in tutti i modi di "accasarla" con uno dei giovani e vuoti borghesi che frequentano i suoi tè. Sogna di fuggire ad Hollywood e vive fantasticando sulle riviste patinate che una cugina le invia dagli USA.
Due personaggi assolutamente distanti quelli di Fern e Ransom, che finiranno per incontrarsi, conoscersi ed amarsi nell'infuriare della catastrofe, uscendone cresciuti e cambiati: Fern diviene una donna consapevole, impegnata, autonoma e padrona della propria vita e delle proprie scelte; Ransom rinasce nell'amore, abbandona alcool, cinismo, solitudine e senso di inutilità, ritrovando la voglia di vivere e, finalmente, di costruire qualcosa, con Fern e per Ranchipur.
Accanto ai due protagonisti si muove una folla di personaggi minori ma caratterizzati in modo così vivido che alla fine del romanzo sembra quasi di conoscerli personalmente. Tra gli altri spiccano Lady Heston (anche lei un personaggio "in evoluzione", da dissipata aristocratica inglese a infermiera al sevizio dei più umili...ma soprattutto del vero amore, mai conosciuto prima), il dott. Safka (in equilibrio tra fede nella scienza e tradizione, tra distacco e passione), ma anche gli Smiley e la zia Febea, l'anziana e arguta Maharani, la terribile signora Simon, l'attempata infermiera McDaid, votata alla sua missione e al segreto quanto impossibile amore per Safka...
INDIMENTICABILE!
Profile Image for Monica. A.
421 reviews38 followers
August 26, 2017
Parte decisamente a rilento, un po' come se il caldo indiano ti piombasse addosso rendendo soporifera la lettura.
A Ranchipur non accade quasi mai nulla, tutto verte intorno alle condizioni climatiche e alla interminabile attesa della stagione delle piogge. Si ammazza il tempo fra incontri e cene che vedono riunita una selezione della comunità inglese e americana perfettamente integrata alla gente del luogo, un variopinto e particolarmente interessante gruppo di persone che racchiude medici, missionari, politici e ricchi annoiati.
Poi immrovvisamente reallizzi, con l'impatto al suolo della prima grossa goccia di pioggia, che i tempi sono stati perfettamente calcolati dall'autore.
Le prime piogge del Monsone lavano via la noia, gli abitanti di Ranchipur sembrano destarsi a nuova vita e, proprio come la vegetazione del luogo, crescere a dismisura gettando nuovi germogli. Una pioggia ristoratrice che dà inizio a tutto, una pioggia che come spesso accade è anche foriera di distruzione e malattia.
Neanche superato lo scoglio delle prime 100 pagine ci si ritrova totalmente coinvolti nella vita di Ranchipur e dei suoi abitanti, o forse ci si è semplicemente abituati al ritmo lento e fatalistico dell'India che scorre immutabile da anni e anni.

Dopo Andrea Sperelli, Tom Ransome è forse uno dei personaggi maschili più interessanti incontrati in questi ultimi anni.

Qualcosa era avvenuto in lui, qualcosa ch'egli aveva cercato, spesso senza saperlo, per tutta la vita: era riuscito a perdere, almeno per il momento, quel terribile se stesso, introspettivo, analitico, pieno di autocommiserazione, che aveva sempre avvelenato ogni soddisfazione. [...]
"Sono finalmente un uomo, un essere umano simile a coloro che Dio ha benedetto col dono della semplicità".
(pag.455)
Profile Image for Alena.
51 reviews
March 9, 2015
I liked this book very much. The author was complete stranger to me, I found the book on the shelf among other old ones (old editions) in a private library and I do not regret picking it. The facts about life in India accord with what I had read in a "travel" book of Czech author who lived in India for quite time later in the 20th century - he worked there when he was young as a volunteer at Service Civil International. His name is also forgotten, like someone has written here about Louis Bromfield - Jan Baltus.

At the same time, I have to admit that the novel "Night in Bombay" by Bromfield didn't catch my tastes. It seemed much as repetition of the story in "Rains" and I put the book away after several tens of pages. Did I make a mistake?
Profile Image for Christine Sinclair.
1,251 reviews13 followers
August 27, 2018
Written way back in 1937, this "Novel of Modern India" has everything! Great plot, excellent characterizations, sweeping history, drama, romance and humor. It's no wonder it was made into a movie, in 1939, Hollywood's Golden Year, with a somewhat simpler plot and fewer characters. I saw the movie first, starring Myrna Loy, Tyrone Power (as an Indian!) and George Brent, with a stellar supporting cast. Then I was lucky enough to find a hardback on E-bay with the stars of the film on the back of the dust jacket! I highly recommend both the book and the movie. Good old-fashioned entertainment.
Profile Image for Ines.
322 reviews264 followers
October 24, 2018
Un capolavoro, anni che nn leggevo un romanzo così toccante,delizioso, sconvolgente e violento....
sembra impossibile che tutti questi aggettivi possano stare insieme ma è così.
Una perla rara letta da pochi, libro scovato per caso nella lista dei libri suggeriti dalla mia prof di greco al liceo nei primi anni 90. che emozione!
Profile Image for ZsZs.
9 reviews
March 25, 2014
Brilliant book written by someone who loves an understands that country and its people and accepts it with their merits and flaws. Loved every sentence of it!
10 reviews
February 7, 2018
One of my favourite all time books. Such a great one, with such an unfolding of characters and depth of feelings. Really recommend it.
Profile Image for Sorin Hadârcă.
Author 3 books259 followers
April 27, 2023
Ca idee, "Vin ploile" e un fel de "Downton Abbey" al Orientului. Iritant și captivant deopotrivă. Romanul are o serie cusururi, dar și tot atâtea calități. Pe alocuri e prea mult: amestecul de adorație și dispreț pentru civilizația indiană, transformarea spirituală a nu mai puțin de patru personaje principale, un cutremur, o inundație și o epidemie de holeră - toate pe parcursul unui sezon ploios înșirate pe 620 de pagini.

Dacă Louis Bromfield și-ar fi dat silința să redacteze și să taie, ar fi devenit poate autorul unei capodopere, dar chiar și neșlefuit diamantul tot diamant rămâne. Îl compar bunăoară cu "Zile birmaneze" de Orwell care, fiindu-i foarte apropiat tematic, merge direct la țintă, evitând arabescurile și locurile comune.

Traducerea în română nu e dintre cele reușite. Există termini tratați cu neglijență (cum ar fi acei "sweepers", care nu-și merită englezismul, fiind în realitate niște simpli măturători). Recomand originalul.
Profile Image for Louise Casals.
59 reviews1 follower
August 10, 2025
Alors ça c'est du roman : un gros pavé très romanesque, grande fresque chorale mettant en scène de nombreux personnages dans une ville indienne quelques années avant l'indépendance. Une catastrophe vient bouleverser toute cette petite société, révélant à chacun qui il est vraiment face à l'épreuve. Histoires d'amour déchirantes, amitiés magnifiques, drames, rebondissements, morts tragiques, paysages grandioses, tout est là ! Le roman se savoure : les réflexions philosophiques, angoisses existentielles et atermoiements sentimentaux des personnages ralentissent parfois l'intrigue mais permettent surtout de rendre les personnages remarquablement complexes et humains, notamment les nombreux personnages féminins. Les relations humaines y sont explorées avec beaucoup de finesse et de sensibilité. Bien sûr, tout n'a pas très bien vieilli dans ce roman de 1937 mais la qualité de son écriture, l'ampleur du récit et la complexité de ses personnages en font un vrai plaisir de lecture comme on n'en croise pas si souvent.
Profile Image for Kinga.
Author 8 books22 followers
March 28, 2020
Well, I have no clue how many stars I should give this book or how I should write about it. On one hand it is a truly terrible colonialist book. I can't even tell you how many times I was screamingly cringing while going through this tome. The tone he is talking about the native population (Hindus, Muslims, anybody), OMG ('poor animals'; they are 'reproducing themselves as worms', etc). To top this, these parts of the book are enshrouded with the most offensive paternalism you can imagine; with the most despicable and abusing belittling of everything that is not (1) European (meaning: white Anglo-Saxon) (2) rich (3) aristocrat. I can easily imagine you would want to throw it in the garbage after the first few pages.

But. Yes, there is a but.

Because on the other hand, the novel is full of extremely well written characters; true, only the upper class people (both Europeans and Hindus, even Muslims). If a person does not belong to the aristocracy (mainly among the native population of India), that's when the godawful paternalistic and hardly bearable colonialism comes in. If you could just erase those parts you could get a novel that deals with true and important (although a bit dated) existential questions; the aimless and useless wanderings of a person; how some of them, waking up from this empty haze by a lifechanging tragedy, are trying to find some (any) meaning of their life by either doing something (socially) good, or by discovering, admitting, and succumbing to their deeper, more honest selves in the form of big, sweeping emotions. Again, it might not sound too original or unique, but Bromfield can write very well, and these parts are truly great.

Bromfield is one of those forgotten authors who were quite successful in their own times (Bromfield himself was very popular, even got a Pulitzer for this book, and several of his novels were turned into beloved Hollywood movies), but fell out of grace quite quickly and nowadays nobody remembers them. Although this novel has some merits, I think it is good that it happened so.
Profile Image for Scott.
59 reviews
July 24, 2013
Loved it. Read because of a 1938 film I liked of the same title. The story and characters were so interesting I looked up the book. Out of print but got a used copy on Amazon.
Basically an early "Disaster" film genre set in British occupied India. Learn lots about life in India in those times and the world in general. Much racier than the film (of course - thanks to the Catholics and the Production Code). Long but very interesting and the bizarre "fun" of seeing who survives the various natural disasters.
Profile Image for Dymbula.
1,054 reviews38 followers
August 20, 2021
Četl jsem ji kdysi dávno a tak nějak vyšuměle zapomněl. Je to krásný příběh, skvěle napsaný. Jak jsem tu knihu mohl zapomneout?
Profile Image for António Dias.
174 reviews19 followers
March 6, 2020
'The Rains Came' is a wonderful piece of Literature.
Besides assembling the quality of the text with the capacity to reach a vast audience of readers, the text is a magnificent portrait of the clash between the eastern and western cultures in India between wars.
The richness of the colours, the scents, the lives, religions, traditions and all the mix that makes India a unique land is portraied side by side with the depth and wity description of the characters.
'The Rains Came' is such a pleasant reading... its 481 pages flew. How great it is to rediscouver this somehow "lost works"... a success in 1937 but a forgotten book today!
Profile Image for Mimi.
349 reviews5 followers
June 16, 2020
Louis Bromfield, an Ohio author, began this book in 1933 in India and completed it in New York City in 1937. Bromfield took several trips to India and in this book captured the sights and sounds of the country during a monsoon. Not only is the book a fascinating look at the country and it’s people but Bromfield does a wonderful job of character development. This book encompasses the human condition of tragedy, immorality, romance and enlightenment. Even though it was written 8O years ago, one can still identify with the foibles if the book’s characters.
Profile Image for Hanne.
110 reviews1 follower
August 3, 2023
I just reread this incredible novel - it is many years since I last read it - and it is just as captivating as I remembered it to be.
This is an old book - it's written before WW2. But it feels just as fresh today.
The plot is set in India. There are a lot of interesting characters, drama, disaster (earthquake, flood, plague, thyfoid fever and cholera). And of course, love! It is of course not explicit, but still surprisingly daring, considering the time at which it was written.
I was unable to put down the book and I highly recommend it.
7 reviews
December 10, 2012
I read this book a long time ago, and re-read it 3 times I think. Imperial India, a flood following to an earthquake, very interesting characters, quite romantic, a really interesting description of the life of different type of English and Indian characters. It reads like a nice story and is also so interesting. One of those books you do not like to put away before you finished it.
202 reviews
March 25, 2018
This is the story of people from various backgrounds and how a natural disaster devastates their community and brings out their best and worst natures. There are cultural clashes and romances and lives are forever changed. I have to watch the movie again. I don't remember how well it follows the book.
Profile Image for Tittirossa.
1,062 reviews333 followers
September 7, 2017
Un romanzo a cui sono affezionata, anche se non ha grossi pregi se non una scrittura scorrevole, ed una storia fluidissima.
L'ho letto la prima volta da ragazzina, e poi l'ho riletto per almeno altre 4-5 volte, tutte le estati.
La storia di Ramsome, scafato e disilluso, della ricca, nobile, annoiata Edwina e dei loro amici nella Ranchipur degli anni '30 o mi ha sempre affascinato.
Profile Image for Sara.
521 reviews67 followers
June 20, 2018
Amazing! One of the best reads so far!
This book threw me in the heart of India without a warning. The characters are all well developed and you cannot not like them! The story seems simple yet it’s complex. It just flows. And you feel the wild spirit of India and its people!
Profile Image for Anna.
58 reviews4 followers
October 16, 2019
It wasn t a good book, but I read it because I wanted to see the indian culture and society. I don t like the author s style of writing, but it was...interesting. So, the book wasn t good, but it was OK.
Profile Image for Wikus.
7 reviews
August 20, 2012
The first-edition publication I inherited from my grandfather (now lost) but a brilliant read and an eternal favourite.
10 reviews
February 16, 2013
I was transfixed, enamoured and scandalised all at once. One of my all times' favourites.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 86 reviews

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