What We Are Reading Today: The British in India - A Social History of the Raj

Updated 31 December 2018
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What We Are Reading Today: The British in India - A Social History of the Raj

Author: David Gilmour

The British in India: A Social History of the Raj is a brilliant historical account, which avoids over simplifications or political posturing.
Author David Gilmour states: “This book is a social history rather than a political one, and it is about individuals rather than institutions.”
“With The British in India: A Social History of the Raj, Gilmour, metaphorical microscope in hand, has written a broad-ranging but precise and intimate examination of the British men and women who served and lived on the subcontinent,” said Isaac Chotiner in a review published in The New York Times.
“Gilmour does not offer much in the way of assistance to people who may be unfamiliar with the workings of the British administration in India, or the contours of Indian history, but he is so wide-ranging and diligent that it almost doesn’t matter,” said Chotiner.
William Dalrymple, reviewing the book The Guardian, said: “All British colonial life in India is here presented in elegant prose.”
“Gilmour, author of biographies of Rudyard Kipling and Curzon, in this book draws on more than 30 years of research in the archives, and presents an astonishing harvest from diaries, memoirs, letters and official documents of the era.”


What We Are Reading Today: ‘The Treehouse’

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Updated 10 January 2026
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What We Are Reading Today: ‘The Treehouse’

  • Walter excels at building tension and sustaining dread

Author: B P Walter

“The Treehouse” by B P Walter unsettles readers with a story told through the eyes of the perpetrators of a horrible crime. It follows two brothers in their 30s — Robert and Kieran — who are bound by blood, secrets, and a terrible act they committed in their youth. Their inner world is an uneasy position for the reader to inhabit, and at its best, the novel leans into that discomfort. 

This 2025 psychological thriller begins with the broadcast of a television series titled “The Treehouse.” The brothers notice a resemblance between the show and their past that is impossible to ignore.

Someone knows, or seems to know, what they did all those summers ago during a family holiday in Cornwall. Someone has taken their secret and turned it into entertainment. For Robert, especially, the fear of being exposed is suffocating. 

Walter excels at building tension and sustaining dread. The anxiety that coils through Robert’s thoughts is convincing, and the dynamic between the brothers becomes increasingly claustrophobic and toxic as the story unravels. It is clear that this is a family, a household, where love exists alongside something far darker.

The question of what exactly happened in the treehouse in 2004 hums beneath every chapter. Yet, despite a compelling premise and moments of real shock, the novel ultimately fell a little flat for me.

The opening is gripping, but once the story settles into the extended childhood timeline, the pacing begins to falter. The past is important, but it dominates the narrative to the point that the present-day thread, which felt sharper and more urgent with its high stakes, is left wanting. 

The limited presence of secondary characters also makes it ultimately feel more predictable than it should, lacking the external conflicts that made the first act of the book so promising. The twists and turns of the final act arrive in quick succession and are less than satisfying.

This was also a difficult book to emotionally connect with; The characters are flawed, often unlikable, and while that may be intentional, it created distance rather than intrigue. 

“The Treehouse” did not hold my attention in the same way as some of Walter’s previous thrillers. It’s a story that seems to linger more for the atmosphere it creates than for where it takes the reader.