The range of the book: from wartime England to colonial Assam; from sapper training in India to jungle warfare in Malaya
- Tea,  Love & War tells the unique true story of the child of an exploited village woman gaining recognition & acceptance in suburban Engl&. It is split into three parts: Stuart & Mary`s story,  David`s story,  & Ann`s story. Stuart,  working on a tea estate in the jungles of Assam,  fathers a child by a teenage native woman. Stuart`s letters to his family in pre-war England vividly describe his life as a planter in colonial India but conceal his secret love life. When war breaks out,  Stuart joins the Indian army,  trains as a sapper & is posted to Malaya,  blowing bridges in the desperate rearguard action against the Japanese invasion. Back in wartime Engl&,  his sister Mary marries Stuart`s best friend,  Arthur,  who decides to train as an army officer. Mary,  now a young mother pregnant with her second child,  tells of the year`s delay in hearing news of her brother`s death at the fall of Singapore. Before the child is born,  she learns that Arthur has been killed in action in Italy. The story switches to a jungle village in Assam where a small Anglo-Indian child named Ann fights her way through poverty & discrimination,  always seeking the identity of her father & his family. Tea,  Love & War is a gripping true story,  narrated by Mary through her son David. ” Much of the text is taken from the many exercise books that she filled with her memories,  & whilst my investigations have expanded & updated her story,  the history of the relevant elements of the Second World War,  the Blitz & public perception of the Malayan campaign leading to the fall of Singapore are more eloquently seen from her individual viewpoint.” The book will appeal to fans of autobiographies,  history & social history
- Anglo-Indian culture & exploitation of women in India are key themes in the text
- & has been inspired by Wild Swans.