What i’m reading this week: Sea of Poppies

in Ecency6 days ago

It was a 4 day weekend and I started reading the Sea of Poppies by Amitav Ghosh and I already have that feeling — the one where you know a book is going to stay with you long after you've turned the last page. Not because of some epic plot twist (though there's plenty of plot), but because the world it builds is rich, layered, and strangely familiar in its chaos.

It’s set in the years leading up to the Opium Wars, but Ghosh doesn’t just give you a history lesson. He throws you into the tide — a swirling sea of languages, identities, and longings. There’s something incredibly alive about the way he writes. You don’t just read Sea of Poppies; you walk the dusty streets, feel the creak of the Ibis under your feet, smell the salt and sweat and something unnamed hanging in the air. What caught me off guard, though, wasn’t the grand sweep of history — it is the characters. Each of them feels like they’ve stepped out of a half-remembered dream. There’s Deeti, a widow whose quiet strength builds with every chapter. Zachary, the mixed-race American sailor trying to figure out who he is.

Neel, the fallen raja whose pride both wounds and protects him. And the language! Ghosh plays with it like music — Bhojpuri, Bengali, English, sailor slang, colonial jargon. It’s like learning a new dialect of storytelling, and I find myself smiling at how unapologetically playful and precise it is. What makes Sea of Poppies special for me is how it blurs the lines — between nations, classes, faiths, even genders — to show how fragile and invented those borders really are. The characters are all, in some way, adrift. They're fleeing something, searching for something, becoming something.

I haven’t finished it yet, and I already like the book. But for now, I’m taking my time. Letting the story seep in slowly, like rain into dry earth. If you’ve ever loved books that create not just a plot, but a world — this one is worth sailing into.

Thanks for reading.