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Kim.
Rudyard Kipling’s great picaresque follows Kimball O’Hara across colonial India through espionage, spiritual quest, railway movement, and a world alive with competing loyalties.
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Edition details
- Rudyard Kipling
- DotBooks
- DotBooks
- Paperback
- Standard white
- 328
- en
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About this book
Kim is one of Rudyard Kipling’s richest and most mobile novels: a picaresque story of disguise, friendship, apprenticeship, and imperial intrigue moving across roads, bazaars, railways, and mountain routes. At its center is Kimball O’Hara, a resourceful boy who belongs everywhere and nowhere, drawn at once toward the secret work of empire and the searching spiritual journey of the Tibetan lama he accompanies.
Themes
The novel explores identity, performance, colonial power, language, surveillance, travel, and the tension between worldly action and inward freedom. Kipling’s India is energetic and crowded with voices, but the book is also inseparable from the structures of empire it depicts, making it a major and complex text rather than a simple adventure tale.
Why readers still return to it
Readers return to Kim for its movement, wit, and emotional breadth. It offers the satisfactions of quest fiction, spy fiction, and coming-of-age narrative at once, while remaining one of the most discussed novels about mobility and empire in English.
Further context
Published in 1901, Kim is widely regarded as one of Kipling’s greatest achievements: a picaresque novel whose energy and observational range continue to attract both general readers and literary critics.
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Kim
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