Tag Archives: Post-9/11

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.

Tidbit: Ooh, what fabulous news indeed (this just in on April 28, 2009): Shamsie is coming to SALTAF 2009. That’s Saturday November 7, 2009. Stay tuned for more announcements … but goodness, the authors of two of my favorite books coming to the Smithsonian. Life is good, huh?

Readers: Adult

Published: 2009

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

Shine, Coconut Moon by Neesha Meminger

shine-coconut-moonFour days after 9/11, a man wearing a turban shows up on Samar’s doorstep – and turns out to be her uncle. After years of estrangement, he’s determined to reunite the fractured family – and in the process teach Sam about her Sikh American heritage. Her comfortable life à deux with her divorced mother disappears, especially in the wake of 9/11 when just looking like the enemy is all the justification some people need for so-called patriotic retaliation.

Review: “In Celebration of Asian Pacific American Heritage Month: New & Notable Books,” The Bloomsbury Review, May/June 2009

Readers: Young Adult

Published: 2009

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Filed under ..Young Adult Readers, .Fiction, Indian, Indian American

Queen of Dreams by Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni + Author Interview [in The Bloomsbury Review]

queen-of-dreamsResponding with Hope to 9/11: A Talk with Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni About Her Latest Novel, Queen of Dreams

Three years after the tragic events of 9/11, Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni remains haunted not only by the vivid images of what happened, but also by the repercussions felt throughout the country, especially in the South Asian American community. Indeed, in a report released by the National Asian Pacific American Legal Consortium six months after the attacks, aptly titled “Backlash: When America Turned on Its Own,” the APA community witnessed a sudden spike in anti-Asian violence, especially against those of South Asian descent. Resembling the enemy literally became a threat to one’s life.

Divakaruni, author of such best-selling books as The Mistress of Spices and Arranged Marriage, uses her latest novel, the magical Queen of Dreams, to capture some of her confusion, fear, and sadness surrounding the events. Ultimately, though, the novel underscores human resilience through the power of hope and forgiveness. Queen is the story of a South Asian American artist in Berkeley who tries to come to terms with the people closest to her heart: her elusive dream-teller mother, her silent father, her growing daughter, and her enigmatic ex-husband. Divakaruni admits it’s her favorite of her own novels thus far.

“I want to touch people, to have them think about issues they haven’t considered before, to make them more compassionate towards other people,” she says. “That was my major intention with writing this book after 9/11: If I could make the pain and the hope powerful enough in the book, then maybe I might stop some of the prejudice out there, and have some sort of countereffect to what followed 9/11.” Divakaruni drew on her own experiences of being “other,” even as she has been in America for almost three decades: “I find that when I really care about a character from a particular background, when I look at those people in my own real life, then I feel differently about them. I feel more compassionate. And that’s my hope for Queen and for my community.” …[click here for more]

Author interview: The Bloomsbury Review, November/December 2004

Readers: Adult

Published: 2004

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Filed under ...Author Interview/Profile, ..Adult Readers, .Fiction, Indian American, South Asian American

Queen of Dreams by Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni + Author Interview [in AsianWeek]

queen-of-dreamsResponding With Hope to Sept. 11

Three years after the tragic events of 9/11, Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni remains haunted not only by the vivid images of what happened, but also by the repercussions felt throughout the country, especially in the South Asian American community. Indeed, in a report released by the National Asian Pacific American Legal Consortium six months after the attacks, aptly titled “Backlash: When America Turned on Its Own,” the APA community witnessed a sudden spike in anti-Asian violence, especially against those of South Asian descent. Resembling the enemy literally became a threat to one’s life.

Divakaruni, author of such best-selling books as The Mistress of Spices and Arranged Marriage, uses her latest novel, the magical Queen of Dreams, to capture some of her confusion, fear, and sadness surrounding the events. Ultimately, though, the novel underscores human resilience through the power of hope and forgiveness. Queen is the story of a South Asian American artist in Berkeley who tries to come to terms with the people closest to her heart: her elusive dream-teller mother, her silent father, her growing daughter, and her enigmatic ex-husband. Divakaruni admits it’s her favorite of her own novels thus far.

“I find that when I really care about a character from a particular background, when I look at those people in my own real life, then I feel differently about them. I feel more compassionate. And that’s my hope for Queen and for my community.”

AsianWeek: You taught writing for years in the Bay Area and recently moved to Houston . … What’s that experience been like?
Chitra Divakaruni: I love teaching at the University of Houston. It has the second best creative writing program in the nation. The program is very international, very multicultural with students from all over world. In a small way, I think my presence makes a difference to the students here. In the Bay Area, which is already so multicultural, you don’t have to push for diversity – basically, people agree on its importance. Here in Texas, you have to push, so maybe my presence here is more important than in the Bay Area.

AW: How did Queen come about?
CD: 9/11 happened and that affected me strongly on many levels – there was the national tragedy itself, and then there were the effects on my own community. Those of Sikh background really suffered. I knew I had to write about it but wasn’t sure how to do so.

I also wanted to explore the sense of mystery about the universe. Reality is not as objective as we like to think it is. Reality is subjective: different people come out of the same event seeing and feeling different things. [And] 9/11 is such an example: Some reacted with great fear, others with violence.

For Rakhi [the book’s central character] and her mother, reality operates very differently. The novel questions how we arrive at our notion of reality and [asks], ‘Can we say there is just one reality?’ That sense of mystery and magic is very important in this novel. …[click here for more]

Author interview: “Responding With Hope to Sept. 11,” AsianWeek, September 24, 2004

Readers: Adult

Published: 2004

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Filed under ...Author Interview/Profile, ..Adult Readers, .Fiction, Indian American, South Asian American