Sylvia Howe’s life began in Assam.The daughter of a tea planter she was educated at home until the age of eight when she was sent to school in England; during her life she has met many others born in the Welsh Mission Hospital in Shillong.
Over the years the young Sylvia maintained a friendly correspondence with her Great Aunt Helen who had remained in Kanpur till she died; one day Sylvia’s father implied something intriguing about the relationship between
In a parallel turn of events in 2005 Helen’s great niece Julia is divorcing a dreary Chelsea marriage and necessarily gets a job, working for Hari an Indian novelist in London; coincidentally at this time Julia finds the cache of very compelling letters from her Great Aunt Helen.
The point of the book is that India helps both women to find their own independence; the freedom to be themselves is an unexpected revelation. In a time of emotional turmoil both individuals are liberated by past and present India.
Howe has visited Kerala, Mysore and Rajasthan, she has vivid memories of her childhood in Shillong and of the tea estate where she remained till her early teens; memories boosted by her rich imagination make the descriptions vibrant. The Jacaranda Letters flatters not only India’s beautiful landscape but cultural ethos, national psyche and expressive society.
Howe left the features department of British Vogue to follow her conservationist husband to work in Africa and Brussels for 12 years, since her return to England she has ghost-written and edited fiction/ non-fiction; presently Howe teaches English in Her Majesty’s prisons and is writing her next novel.