Book 112: The Book Thief – Markus Zusak
This is one of those situations where I’m glad I don’t read the backs of books carefully each time before […]
Book 112: The Book Thief – Markus Zusak Read Post »
This is one of those situations where I’m glad I don’t read the backs of books carefully each time before […]
Book 112: The Book Thief – Markus Zusak Read Post »
So far of the books my boss lent me last September this is by far my favorite. Although I enjoyed
Book 104: People in Trouble – Sarah Schulman Read Post »
Hood is the first of the 40 books I’ve committed to in Reading Challenges for 2012. It comes from the Mount
Book 89: Hood – Emma Donoghue Read Post »
A friend in undergrad recommended I read this novel and I’m sad it took me this long to read it. The Namesake is one of the most beautifully and eloquently written novels I have read this year, if not ever.
There is something so simple and yet strikingly intricate in Lahiri’s prose. I can only compare her to the lyrical like prose I’ve read from many Irish authors. I found myself repeating sentences in my head because of their artful construction. The foreign names, foods, and customs interwoven with the familiar places and customs created a story I couldn’t put down. I’ve compared Jhumpa Lahiri to Jane Austen, in the ordinariness of what she writes and her style, and I stand by this, but it is the lives and deaths—the full picture, rather than the snapshot—at which Lahiri excels.
Book 69: The Namesake – Jhumpa Lahiri Read Post »