Brick Lane: Shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize

Brick Lane: Shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize

Softcover
3.523
EmanzipationInterkulturelle DifferenzSoziale UngleichheitLondon

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Description

This exciting and deeply moving debut novel follows the tumultuous life of nazneen from her birth in a bangladeshi village hut, to her arranged marriage to chanu and the subsequent move to london’s tower hamletsnazneen’s inauspicious entry to the world, an apparent stillbirth on the hard mud floor of a bangladeshi village hut, imbues in her a sense of fatalism that she carries across continents when she is married off to chanu her life in london’s tower hamlets is, on the surface, calm for years, keeping house and rearing children, she does what is expected of her yet nazneen walks a tightrope stretched between her daughters’ embarrassment and her husband’s resentments chanu calls his elder daughter the little memsahib ‘i didn’t ask to be born here,’ say shahana, with regular finalityinto that fragile peace walks karim he sets questions before her, of longing and belonging; he sparks in her a turmoil that reflects the community’s own; he opens her eyes and directs her

Book Information

Main Genre
N/A
Sub Genre
N/A
Format
Softcover
Pages
496
Price
8.35 €

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Read my full review here:https://tessasworldofthings.blogspot.de/2017/03/brick-lane-by-monica-ali.htmlThis book follows Nazneen, a Bangladeshi woman, who was forced into an arranged marriage with a considerably older man, Chanu. She and her husband immigrate to England, more precisely London, when she was only 18, in order to find a better and wealthier life. Chanu, being a well-educated man, is gone to work every day, leaving his wife at home. With no knowledge of the language or the culture, Nazneen has to find her way through the urban jungle.When her first son is given and then taken by fate, when her sister, who ran away for a love marriage in Bangladesh, tells her about her struggles, Nazneen relies on her fate to show her the right path. She gives birth to two daughters, their oldest turning into a modern, English teenager, but Chanu can only think of going back to Bangladesh, because there he will be treated with more respect than by the English. In order to raise enough money for their trip back home, Chanu gets Nazneen a job as a seamstress. While working she meets Karim, a fellow Bangladeshi, who, for the first time in her life, makes her realize how passion and love can feel like. At this point Nazneen has to decide: Will she stand by and let fate decide how her life will go on, or will she take action.One of this books comments, you know, the quotes from newspapers on the book covers and such, says (from Observer) "richly complex characters". There are no richly complex characters. Nazneen doesn't do anything. She's incredibly unhappy with her life, but she just doesn't feel like doing anything against it, because apparently she's fine with it. Since her fate decided. This book of 492 pages revolves around a character, that has no individual thought, that doesn't take action, that is entirely passive and repeats stories about her childhood that probably are supposed to have some deeper, more thoughtful meaning, but are entirely lost on me. Or maybe they don't and Ali just wanted to fill a few pages. Much more interesting is Nazneen's sister Hasina, you know, the one who ran away to get married because she was in love, the one who takes action, struggling and fighting... She writes letters to Nazneen, and when you read the book, you read the letters. For reasons I can't decipher, Ali decided to write these letters in ridiculously broken English. One, I doubt that Hasina would write in English to her sister, but rather use her native tongue, so Two, I don't think that Hasina is incapable of speaking her own language. So, why on earth would Ali represent her in such a horrible way? She's the only character that's sort of raising some fascination, and calling anything in this book fascinating would be a complete overstatement. Chanu, one of two men in this book, is the most annoying man I've ever read about. Such a talker, jeez! And of course no matter what he didn't accomplish, it's always somebody else's fault. It might be because he never walks the talk, but hey, just guessing here.I didn't like this book. At all. It took me incredibly long to reach the last fifty pages or so, when finally something is happening and Nazneen finally does something, but then I already trudged through the rest of the 380 pages..

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