**Should Read as 4.5 Stars!**
This truly engaging historical novel is the 14th volume of the delightful "Matthew Hervey" series.
As ever the book is filled with historical details, which you can find at the beginning and at the end of the book, while right inside the book you'll notice a wonderful picture of St Mary's Church, Fort St George, and also at the beginning is a very well-drawn map of India in circa AD 1834 and its (sub)rulers.
Storytelling is of a superb quality, although in some parts of the book it was a bit slow at times, but due to the author's military expertise and background its very accurate.
All characters come, whether they are real historical and enjoyable fictional, beautifully to life in a very humanlike and believable manner in this story of war and death.
This tale is set in the year AD 1834, and Matthew Hervey and his Sixth Light Dragoons will be taken from Madras to the Province of Chintal, to stop an insurrection there will all possible force, but before they will have to act on this insurrection, they have to will have to deal and capture thuggees (thugs), who are roaming the country and are dealing death to unwary (rich) travellers.
Before and after the Battle of Chintalpore, Matthew Hervey will meet an old acquaintance if his being Suneyla, the forced self-proclaimed Ranee of Chintal, due to the forceful and deceitful revolutionary, Ashok Acharya.
What is to follow is an excellent account of the Battles in India, told with verve and in an authentic way by an author with military experience, and which is brought to us in a most wonderful but also very believable fashion, to be enjoyed and liked in every possible way from start to finish.
Very much recommended, for this is a splendid addition to this amazing humane military series, and that's why I like to call this hugely enjoyable episode: "A Very Likeable Indian Tigress"!