Category Archives: Indian African

Amriika by M.G. Vassanji

AmriikaThe premise of this disappointing novel revolves around Ramji, who, by the time he arrives in the U.S. in 1968 from his home in Dar es Salaam, East Africa (now Tanzania), he is already doubly displaced. As the novel unfolds, it, too, struggles with a dual identi­ty that is never resolved. On the one hand, the story is about a young foreign student who becomes politically aware in college, then marries and settles for suburbia, goes through a mid-life crisis, finds his soulmate in a younger woman and gives up everything to live his life of free love. On the other, the work is a political treatise on taking action, pursuing your beliefs and not betraying your fellow warriors. And never the twain shall meet. While the exposure to the Indian diaspora was interesting – I had no prior knowledge of the East African Indian community– it was, alas, not enough to make Amriika a literary success.

FYI … Vassanji’s later The In-Between Life of Vikram Lall (2004) is actually a far superior choice.

Review: “Bolo! Bolo! Tell Me! South Asian writers move into the literary spotlight,” aMagazine: Inside Asian America, June/July 2001

Readers: Adult

Published: 2001 Continue reading

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Filed under ..Adult Readers, .Fiction, Indian African, Indian American, South Asian American

Ashok by Any Other Name by Sandra S. Yamate, illustrated by Janice Tohinaka

Ashok by Any Other NameAshok, a young Indian American boy, wishes he had a more “American” name. So each day, Ashok tries a new moniker, from Tom to Walter to Frances, until he realizes with the help of the school librarian that “Ashok” is already the perfect name for him.

Review: “Asian American Titles,” What Do I Read Next? Multicultural Literature, Gale Research, 1997

Readers: Children

Published: 1992 Continue reading

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Filed under ..Children/Picture Books, .Fiction, Indian African, Japanese American