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The Unknown Errors of Our Lives: Stories by…
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The Unknown Errors of Our Lives: Stories (original 2001; edition 2002)

by Chitra Divakaruni

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432757,855 (3.81)9
Chitra Divakaruni is well known for her highly acclaimed novel THE MISTRESS OF SPICES and her award winning short story collection ARRANGED MARRIAGE. In this new collection she weaves tales of India and of new settlers in America with touching perception and colour. A young girl protects her small brother from the wrath of her father and the stain of poverty, but when he flees the house to escape, she catches the bright white of his shirt flashing past the foliage of the Indian trees and finds she has to keep the greatest secret of them all: his fight for liberty; a widowed grandmother arrives in America to stay with her only son and his children, looking forward to a new life among those who love her most but soon discovers a world of materialism, familial strife and the loss of family ties. In this exquisite collection of stories, Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni paints the realities of solitude, expectation, love and betrayal and deftly embroiders a colourful tapestry of life in the East and West.… (more)
Member:sam13
Title:The Unknown Errors of Our Lives: Stories
Authors:Chitra Divakaruni
Info:Anchor (2002), Edition: Reprint, Paperback
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The Unknown Errors of Our Lives by Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni (2001)

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English (6)  French (1)  All languages (7)
Showing 1-5 of 6 (next | show all)
In this short story collection, Divakaruni explores the lives of Indians facing the differences of the American way of life versus the Indian way. A mother living in America with her son’s family finds herself with no real place there while her friend in India thinks she must be living a wonderful life of leisure in America. A young Indian-American mother fights with her feelings about the father who abandoned her to go to America, who now wants to meet his only grandson. A young woman strikes out on her own, only to find herself in the middle of a soap opera situation- living with her boss’s ‘second wife’ and having two people fall in love with her. The expectations of the elders is that woman will be subordinate and do all the child care and housework; the younger generation- especially those born in America- think that is nonsense. The older generation embarrasses the younger with their old country ways. Traditional Indian ways hit up against the tide of change. These are lovely little stories of the juggling acts that immigrant families sometimes have to face. ( )
  lauriebrown54 | Feb 3, 2015 |
These stories are beautiful: evocative, descriptive, engaging. All the narrators are female and Indian, but very different people. Finished in one sitting. ( )
  MarieAlt | Mar 31, 2013 |
A collection of short stories, most of them focused on Indian immigrants to the US. Not all the stories are as moving as the first, "Mrs. Dutta Writes a Letter." But Divakaruni writes beautifully, and each story brings to life characters in conflict with the past, their memories, their families, and cultures. ( )
  Cariola | Jun 20, 2009 |
“Who you are is a mystery, No one can Answer, Not even you.”  ----Jamaica Kincaid The book starts with this lovely line…. It is a collection of Short Stories, which I wished were longer. The stories are largely about Indians settled abroad. It’s about their experiences & life. Almost all the stories are talk about some actions & its final outcome. The essence of all the stories is that in our lives whatever we do is driven by the circumstances at that point of and also by what we think then. Later we can always introspect them and think why did we do this and why not that. As is said in one of the stories…there is a girl who keeps a diary ‘Book of Errors’ in her childhood. Later when she is getting married and is packing up her stuff she laid her hand on this diary. Her thoughts at that time (excerpts from the book) One day you look back at your teenage self and realize how excruciatingly clueless you were, more so even then you had thought your parents to be. And pompous to boot. Here, for example, is the quotation she’d copied out in her tight, painstaking handwriting: An unexamined life is not worth living. As if a 14~year~ old had any idea of what an examined life was. The notion of tracking errors possesses some merit, except that her errors we so puerile, so everygirl. The stories range from the agonies of a Mom who has been shifted to an alien country & is troubling to adjust there (the mood & essence is the same as Sudipto’s review); To the story of a brother & sister suffering from domestic violence from their hands of their father & their plans to escape from the same; to a lady adjusting to the fact that she still shares a bond with her father despite that he had abandoned her & her mother. The author beautifully captures the battered mind of a girl who was a victim of Riots, and how she resurges against all the odds, because she kept on trying. The book ends with a sweet story about Bengali nicknames and the significance of our own culture. It is about believing in oneself, standing against the society and still achieve what was not expected from you. One of the lines of the story Guilt is easier to live with than regret. Regret of not even trying. My favourite story is What the Body Knows, It’s about a girl who delivers a baby and then falls seriously ill and is left with no desire to live. How she recuperates and what drives it is beautiful & strange at the same time. Worth a read.   As have written previously the book ponders on that we always think that “Ohhh!!! Am doing this, what will be the results?” But we never think of the small errors which happen in life and we don’t even know about them. So isn’t it better to at least give things a try? We might not achieve the desired results but may be we might achieve it and there will never be a regret that we didn’t even try. Errors are a part of life and we can not live escaping truth.   The book has a positive approach which appeals to me. The only thing that I didn’t like about the book was that it had short stories, they surely left you wanting for more...An appeal to Chitra Banerjee...Right a novel again...  Having read 4 books from the author and liking three out of them, am surely becoming a fan.  The author has a style of touching your nerves…she surely did touch mine….  ( )
  bookslifenmore | Jun 13, 2009 |
How do we know what choices we make lead to what actions or issues? Excellent writing. ( )
  majorbabs | Apr 4, 2008 |
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When the alarm goes off at 5:00 A.M., buzzing like a trapped wasp, Mrs. Dutta has been laying awake for quite a while.
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Chitra Divakaruni is well known for her highly acclaimed novel THE MISTRESS OF SPICES and her award winning short story collection ARRANGED MARRIAGE. In this new collection she weaves tales of India and of new settlers in America with touching perception and colour. A young girl protects her small brother from the wrath of her father and the stain of poverty, but when he flees the house to escape, she catches the bright white of his shirt flashing past the foliage of the Indian trees and finds she has to keep the greatest secret of them all: his fight for liberty; a widowed grandmother arrives in America to stay with her only son and his children, looking forward to a new life among those who love her most but soon discovers a world of materialism, familial strife and the loss of family ties. In this exquisite collection of stories, Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni paints the realities of solitude, expectation, love and betrayal and deftly embroiders a colourful tapestry of life in the East and West.

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