Showing posts with label Immigrant Fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Immigrant Fiction. Show all posts

Saturday, April 10, 2010

Interpreter of Maladies – Jhumpa Lahiri

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It almost seemed like a lifetime since I had read a collection of short stories. I was also looking forward to reading a book set in India to partly quell my nostalgia, but partly to give my readers a spicy, aromatic taste of this exotic land. Interpreter of Maladies just seemed to fit my bill and so I set about perusing it. In the end, I was left with some mixed feelings about the book.
 
Interpreter of Maladies is a motley collection of nine tales travelling between the frigid New England winters to the bustling city of Calcutta in India. There is a strong undercurrent of love and longing welling up in her characters, some for their homeland, while still others for the life that once was, with the familiar stranger that they have grown used to. Through these stories, Lahiri has tried to capture the feelings of awe and fear that passes through an immigrant’s mind as they travel the seas to a land far removed from their own. All the tales are heavy with an air of poignancy, typical of Lahiri.

Lahiri is definitely a good writer with her vivid imagination and accurate depiction of her characters. It is because of this latter trait that the reader becomes quite attached to most of her characters, although they are only available for twenty or so pages. I liked her knack of bringing unlikely people together in a relationship that seems to extend it’s arms of friendship, while making strangers out of once-upon-a-time-lovers. She has brought our attention to the strangeness of the human mind when a woman cannot tell her husband some bitter truths about their relationships but can do so to someone she has met for only a day, for precisely that reason.

However a few stories like ‘This Blessed House’ and ‘The Treatment of Bibi Haldar’ seemed to have been stretching on forever and in the end, revealed themselves to be quite pointless.
 
Interpreter of Maladies is a decent choice if you are looking for a collection of stories to read.

Book Rating – 3.5/5

Book Stats:-

No. of Pages:- 198;
Year Published:- 1999;
Publisher:- Houghton Mifflin Company
Book Setting:- US, India;
Reading dates:- 05/Apr/2010 - 07/Apr/2010

Stories in my order of preference:-

  • Sexy
  • A Temporary Matter
  • Interpreter of Maladies
  • When Mr Pirzada came to dine
  • Mrs Sen’s
  • The Third and Final Continent
  • A Real Durwan
  • This Blessed House
  • The Treatment of Bibi Haldar

Other books by Jhumpa Lahiri that you might be interested in:-
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Watch out for my next review from the exotic Caribbean island of Jamaica, A Long Song by Andrea Levy, the tale of a 19th century slave and her owners.

Sunday, March 14, 2010

Burnt Shadows - Kamila Shamsie



Some books are meant to be read. Others re-read several times. Burnt Shadows obviously belongs to the latter. I was drawn to the book as bees to nectar ,and emerged out of the Unity bookstall 30 dollars shorter. With such a name one can't go too wrong with picking a book, I argued with the notorious guilt conscience. The prologue had me.

Spanning 5 countries and 6 decades, Burnt Shadows begins where the world as we knew ended, in Nagasaki, on August 9 1945. The day began as a perfectly blue day but only the survivors, among them Hiroko, would associate it with a certain greyness. The greyness clouding the world, when war has removed all the vibrant colors.

War remains at the core of Burnt Shadows, not the horrors of war as you see it happening before you, but picking up from broken shards of a former life, in the aftermath of war itself. Every country that it encompasses, begins at a point when it has been razed down by hatred. Hiroko Tanaka loses her lover, Konrad, a German translator, on that fateful August day and her life changes forever.  Two years later she moves to Delhi, in search of Konrad's estranged half-sister, Iles Weiss(Elizabeth) and her husband, James Burton. Being a born linguist, and not having much to do, she learns Urdu from Sajjad Ashraf, an employee of James and hence, of the Raj. Soon enough, her seemingly quiet life is once again thrown into turmoil as Pakistan is born, and suddenly religion comes to the forefront of issues during Partition.

Displaced once again, the story follows Hiroko into Karachi. Kamila's powerful narrative style is evident as she gives us a glimpse into the lives and loves of her characters as they  brave the heat of Delhi or catch the seashore breeze in Karachi. She brings to light an important fact, that beneath all the religious frenzy dividing the two countries, as even nature did not deem fit, is a fundamental similarity. Kamila's literary creativity is evident in her use of rich metaphors as evident in phrases such as 'hair like black water' to drive a point home. At various points in the book, Kamila reveals that she is a master story teller with her strong plot and deep characters. She could not have chosen better than Hiroko, the Japanese, to try and lift the existing social hierarchy in a class conscious Indian society at the height of the British Raj.

Kamila has accurately captured the sense of imminent fear in the minds of her characters as they propel through the course of history and their lives, in a post 9/11 era, comforting themselves with the phrase 'After the war', only there is no same after. These otherwise fair minded characters, particularly Kim Burton lose all their  sense of justice and morality when it is a question of their nation's security. 

Immigrants have been given their due as all the characters are blasted out of their natural surroundings by the loud cries of war. Even as sorrow, (never regret), pervades the lives of her characters, the colorful descriptions of the numerous flora in the gardens of Delhi, seem to bring relief to them.  Friendships seem to transcend national and religious boundaries. The scenes capturing Ilse and Hiroko's friendship in particular, seem to be a pleasure to read. Sajjad's optimism permeates through the pages of the book and the reader finds himself catching on to it.

Burnt Shadows touches you to such an extent that you can never get over those feelings or the book. It raises some important questions about the world we live in, in the reader's mind, with haunting echoes reiterating, what could have been had, being destroyed forever in the name of war. As Guns & Roses, once sang, 'What is civil about war anyways?'.

Hurry and grab your copy of Burnt Shadows before it is too late.

Book Rating - 4.5/5

Lines from the book that leave an imprint:

"As for justice, it seemed an insult to the dead to think there could be any such thing."
"On dewy mornings the spiders build elaborate webs. Or perhaps the webs only become visible when dew is captured in their threads." 
"The bomb did nothing beautiful."
"But until you see a place you have known your whole life reduced to ash you don't realise how much we crave familiarity."
"...just this easily everything worthwhile in a life can be erased." 
"Muslim fatalism? No. No. Pakistani resignation. It's a completely different thing." 
"The men and women who walk through shadow-worlds in search of the ones they loved. Monsters who spread their wings and land on human skin, resting there, biding their time. The  army of fire demons, dropped from the sky, who kill with an embrace."
"...bodies without skin, bodies with organs on display, bodies that reveal what happens to bodies when nothing in them works any more." 
"We make a desolation and call it peace." 
"War is like a disease. Until you've had it you don't know it."  

If you like this book, you might also like:-

And now that I have left my readers with a heavy heart, it will not be long before I come back with tales of mirth about The Graveyard Book-Neil Gaiman.  

Monday, March 8, 2010

The Buddha of Suburbia - Hanif Kureishi



The Buddha of Suburbia is the third book by Hanif Kureishi that I have read. I was not very impressed with Kureishi's books in the past but I went ahead and picked up this book as it was part of the 1001 books list and I had heard some rave reviews about it. For those of you who are unfamiliar with the 1001 books, it is an evolving list of some great books spanning 3 centuries, including some of the contemporary titles. I am slowly getting used to Kureishi's writing style but this book did seem to be a let down.

The protagonist in the Buddha of Suburbia is Karim, a disillusioned teenager living in a dingy London suburb. Being the son of a an Indian Muslim father and an English mother, he feels trapped in a world he does not fully comprehend. He is in awe with the London lifestyle and believes his liberation lies in getting there. Meanwhile his father has taken to the eastern philosophies of yoga and meditation and is charming his way through the minds of the confused suburbans.

Kureishi has touched upon some very immoral themes in this book ,with a certain callousness that can leave the reader a bit bemused but far more confused. His characters live in a state of constant squalor that can even go as far as disgusting at times. The story seemed to simply drift from the suburbs to the city as did the characters. There was a wide ensemble of characters but all the characters lacked a certain punch.

There was also an underlying contradiction in the novel. Karim, although, born in England to an English mother seemed to associate more with his Indian self. He believed himself to be an Indian immigrant rather than one of the English. Considering his half-English origins, bundled with the fact that he had never set foot in India would have quite easily disqualified him from the immigrant status. But Kureishi made him out to be the unfortunate immigrant and the tale told through an immigrant's perspective.

To do the book some justice, I need to mention that the irreverent humour, at places, did seem to truly make me laugh. Kureishi handled Karim's transformation from the role of observer as he tramps along the suburbs, to observed as he frolics along the streets of London, quite well.

The book is really not worth your while. But if you have heard of Hanif Kureishi and would like to try his books, then this is probably a better bet.

Book Rating - 2.5/5

The Little Stranger by Sarah Waters is the next review steaming in the  background. So don't miss out on it.