Category Archives: British Asian

Burnt Shadows by Kamila Shamsie

burnt-shadowsEven though it’s only April (and the book doesn’t even hit stands until next month), I’m announcing with absolute certainty that Burnt Shadows gets my unwavering vote as THE Book of the Year. I’ll only be too happy to eat my words because that can only mean more great future reads, but I’m not holding my breath that another title will unseat Shamsie’s latest novel anytime soon.

Imagine the literary accomplishment – such poetic audacity, even! – of recounting one couple’s impulsive decision to wed, her conversion to Islam, their mosque-blessed union, their first-ever lovemaking in the warm falling rain, and their return to the house they left in such a flurry just a few hours earlier, juxtaposed line by repetitive line of how many times (17) the husband-half of the other couple voices aloud to his waiting wife, “Where do you think they are?”

Or how about the heartbreaking irony of capturing the custom in one farming village in Afghanistan – at least before war decimated the once fertile country – that a boy is recognized to be a man when his growing hand can finally hold a pomegranate in its entirety within … and yet even before that hand is large enough to hold the ripened sweet fruit, it already knows too well how to hold and fire an AK-47 without remorse.

The book is filled with such moments of beauty and desperation, of joyful anticipation and the most horrific inhumanity. It’s a story of three generations of two intertwined families, each of the family members inhabiting, discarding, and adapting to a vastly international cross-section of histories and cultures.

In Nagasaki just on the eve of the end of World War II, Hiroko Tanaka has lovingly agreed to marry Konrad Weiss, a German ex-pat intellectual now reviled by the same community that once welcomed him as an equal ally. Too soon Nagasaki becomes a symbol of great sacrifice where lives must be destroyed in seconds, ironically for the sake of future peace. Hiroko survives, but is marked forever by bird-shaped shadows of death – the design of the kimono she was wearing that is literally burnt onto her back in the instant the second atom bomb detonated.

She travels to India, where she might find, amazingly enough, the only connection to her former life. She arrives in Delhi at the home of Konrad’s older half-sister and her British husband, a privileged representative of the British Raj, now waiting for Partition which will send them all ‘home.’ There the initial contact between these two disparate families is cemented …. and more than half a century later, in the heated aftermath of 9/11, their three-generation relationship will have to face some of the most heartbreaking man-made consequences once again.

Burnt Shadows is one of those books that the less you know about, the more you’ll appreciate as you discover its intricacies on your own. So I shall not include spoilers here. I’ll just be the one to insist you must absolutely read this book! Lucky for us that most book sites let you pre-order: QUICK, open a new window and reserve your copy NOW.

Readers: Adult

Published: 2009 Continue reading

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Filed under ...Absolute Favorites, ..Adult Readers, .Fiction, Afghan, British, British Asian, Indian, Japanese, Pakistani, South Asian

The Perfect Man by Naeem Murr

Perfect ManNaeem Murr’s latest novel is a near-perfect coming-of-age story about an Indian-born, London-raised young man, dropped into the American Midwest virtually without support, and was last year’s Commonwealth Writers’ Prize for Europe and South Asia for Best Book, as well as a 2006 Booker long-lister.

Rajiv Travers arrives as a scared young boy in the strained London home of his British uncle after being abandoned in India by his missing Indian mother and his irresponsible British father. When he proves to be no more than a half-breed embarrassment, especially for his cold, brutal aunt-in-law, he’s sent away again, at age 12, this time to another uncle in tiny Pisgah, Missouri. When that uncle promptly commits suicide, Raj becomes the unlikely charge of his uncle’s lover, Ruth, a writer of steamy romances who shows little emotion in her own life, who most definitely never wanted children. Raj’s quiet presence soon changes that.

Raj finds himself befriended by two local children, headstrong Annie and gentle Lewis. The threesome will remain bittersweetly entwined by both joy and tragedy for the rest of their lives. In 1950s middle America, the small town is filled with immigrants from all over world, who live by their too-many misconceptions about people different from themselves. From murder to incest to adultery to unbridled racism, Pisgah is anything but a pastoral refuge. Murr weaves an astonishing story of one unlikely immigrant young boy’s journey to (perfect) manhood, the lives he touches, and the identity he must create and protect for himself in order to survive.

Readers: Young Adult, Adult

Published: 2007 (United States) Continue reading

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Filed under ...Absolute Favorites, ..Adult Readers, ..Young Adult Readers, .Fiction, British, British Asian, Hapa, Lebanese

A Golden Age by Tahmima Anam

golden-ageHere’s the best news up front: Tahmima Anam’s impressive debut is the first of a planned trilogy. While still mourning the sudden loss of her too-young husband, Rehana loses custody of her young son and daughter to a scheming brother-in-law. Separated for a year with her children faraway in Lahore while she remains in Dhaka, Rehana manages to get them back out of sheer will – determined that she will never lose them again. In 1971 when the people of Bangladesh declare independence from Pakistan, Rehana is no longer certain how she can protect her children during a horrific time marked by betrayal and terror. But neither will she remain a silent bystander while civil war threatens to destroy her family, friends, and adopted country.

Review: “In Celebration of Asian Pacific American Month: A Survey of New & Notable Books,” The Bloomsbury Review, May/June 2008

Tidbit: Anam was a guest at SALTAF 2008 (South Asian Literary and Theater Arts Festival), a much-anticipated, highly-attended annual fall event sponsored by the Smithsonian APA Program and NetSAP-DC.

Readers: Young Adult, Adult

Published: 2008 Continue reading

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Filed under ..Adult Readers, ..Young Adult Readers, .Fiction, Bangladeshi, Bangladeshi American, British Asian, South Asian, South Asian American

Londonstani by Gautam Malkani

londonstaniHere’s what makes Londonstani a difficult read: “Yeh, blud, safe … Gora ain’t seein double, innit.”

Fortunately, for American readers, the U.S. edition comes with a glossary to help decode the West London, South Asian, rudeboy street slang. Translation of the above passage? Something along the lines of “Yes, brother, okay. The white male isn’t seeing double, right?”

The novel’s language is also rough in another sense: throughout the book’s dialogue, obscenities abound.

But that said, deciphering the multiple layers of this first novel by Gautam Malkani, wunderkind and creative business editor of the Financial Times, offers a worthy reward, both in its delicious surprise ending (pages 13 and 240 have innocuous clues, but I’ll say no more), and in the deeper meaning it imparts to easy catchwords such as “assimilation” and “multiculturalism.”

British ethnic literature is currently bling (read: “flashy,” as in desirable), with latest Orange Prize-winning Zadie Smith as its reigning queen. Malkani, together with Tarun Tejpal (whose Alchemy of Desire is scheduled to make its U.S. debut this December) are two of the British publishing industry’s brightest stars this season. With its favorable reviews on the other side of the Pond, the buzz around Londonstani is quickly traveling Stateside. …[click here for more]

Review: Christian Science Monitor, July 11, 2006

Readers: Young Adult, Adult

Published: 2006 (United States) Continue reading

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Filed under ..Adult Readers, ..Young Adult Readers, .Fiction, British, British Asian, South Asian

Bhangra Babes by Narinder Dhami

bhangra-babes1The third installment in the entertaining lives of Amber, Jazz, and Geena Dhillon, three fabulous sisters who befriend a new girl in school – who isn’t exactly a poster child for niceness – even as the trio competes for the attentions of a dreamy new rapper of an upperclassman. Follows hot on the heels of Bindi Babes (2004) and Bollywood Babes (2005).

Reviews: “In Celebration of Asian Pacific American Month: A Literary Survey,” The Bloomsbury Review, May/June 2006

TBR‘s Contributing Editors’ Favorite Reads of 2006: These Are a Few of My Favorite Things … in Print, That Is …,” The Bloomsbury Review, November/December 2006

Readers: Middle Grade, Young Adult

Published: 2006 (United States) Continue reading

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Filed under ..Middle Grade Readers, ..Young Adult Readers, British Asian

MAO: The Unknown Story by Jung Chang and Jon Halliday

Mao ChangFrom the bestselling author of Wild Swans (together with a well-known academic), comes an unflinching look at one of the most powerful, influential figures of the 20th-century, not to mention one of the most evil – he is alleged to have caused the death of 70 million Chinese, and that was during peacetime!

Review: “New and Notable Books,” AsianWeek, November 3, 2005

Readers: Adult

Published: 2005 Continue reading

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Filed under ..Adult Readers, .Biography, .Nonfiction, British Asian, Chinese

Bindi Babes and Bollywood Babes by Narinder Dhami

Bindi Bollywood Babes

Welcome to the fabulous world of the Bindi Babes, otherwise known as the dynamic Dhillon sisters, Amber, Jazz, and Geena. In the first installment of the trilogy, Bindi Babes, they manage to keep up a fabulous public face in spite of learning to live with the tragedy of losing their beloved mother to leukemia, and fighting interference with an unwanted Auntie who comes to live with them. In Bollywood Babes, having accepted Auntie’s permanent presence, the sisters have the not-so-wise idea of tracking down a has-been Bollywood star to be the guest of honor at their school’s fundraiser – but the best laid plans often go awry. The last trilogy installment, Bhangra Babes, for those who can’t wait, is already available in the UK.

Review: “New and Notable Books,” AsianWeek, May 26, 2005

Readers: Middle Grade, Young Adult

Published: 2004, 2005 (United States) Continue reading

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Filed under ..Middle Grade Readers, ..Young Adult Readers, .Fiction, British Asian

Maps for Lost Lovers by Nadeem Aslam

Maps for Lost LoversPersonal favorite of the month – and favorite of many others as it won the Kiriyama Prize just recently. A pair of unmarried lovers goes missing. Five months later, the woman’s brothers are charged with their murder. The burden is placed on the man’s older brother to bring not just the family, but their reeling London Pakistani community back together. Lush, contemplative, vivid.

Review: “New and Notable Books,” AsianWeek, May 26, 2005

Readers: Adult

Published: 2005 (United States) Continue reading

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Filed under ..Adult Readers, .Fiction, British Asian, Pakistani, South Asian

The Harmony Silk Factory by Tash Aw

Harmony Silk FactoryFirst reaction: WOW! Second reaction: Read it! The story revolves around the Harmony Silk Factory, a textiles shop in rural Malaysia run by Johnny Lim, part crook, part untouchable legend.

Three narrators – his resentful son, his beautiful wife, his one and only friend – recount their very different relationships with the unknowable Johnny. In Rashomon-style, Aw’s three narrators prove unreliable, their stories overlapping only over minute details. Ultimately, the reader must decide where the truth might lie – and whether truth is ever discernible.

Review: “New and Notable Books, AsianWeek, May 5, 2005

Readers: Adult

Published: 2005 Continue reading

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Filed under ..Adult Readers, .Fiction, British Asian, Malaysian

Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro

Never Let Me GoConfession: I’m an utter Ishiguro groupie. His latest novel makes me only more obsessed, even as it completely creeps me out. Hailsham (halcyon? sham? ) is the English countryside boarding school where Kathy, Ruth, and Tommy grow up together. As the adult Kathy looks back on their lives, the truth comes out in bits and pieces, beginning with who they really are: clones who have been created to provide major body parts to “normal” people. Knowing that, you can’t put this one down.

Review: “New and Notable Books, AsianWeek, May 5, 2005

Readers: Adult

Published: 2005 Continue reading

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Filed under ..Adult Readers, .Fiction, British Asian, Nonethnic-specific