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Loading... Life Isn't All Ha Ha Hee Hee (edition 2001)by Meera Syal
Work InformationLife Isn't All Ha Ha Hee Hee by Meera Syal
Indian Diaspora (11) Loading...
Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. Great story about three women. ( ) This is a novel with a familiar pretext: three female friends from school days grow up and either get what they wanted, or don't. Tania, Chila, and Sunita are the pretty one, the dreamer, and the smart one, all Indian Brits living in London. Their intertwined lives are damaged by deception, heartache, and family troubles, all realistic and enchantingly told. The cultural aspect of living with and loving your ethnic heritage (despite never having been to India!) are also handled with a fine pen, as is "love" vs arranged marriage. Highly recommended! Quotes: "Choosing whom you love is the most political decision you can make." "Tania did not subscribe to the theory that every time a relationship ended, the other person walked away with a piece of you, and vice versa. That would mean most of the population would become colanders in a rainstorm." An excellent blend of chiclit and serious literature. The book is not a "light read" but is disguised as one, with the way it encompasses topics of typical chic lit fiction (love, adultery, dull marriages, girl friends, midlife crisis, dysfunctional families) with profound insight and realism -- no sugar coating, but no hyperbolic drama, either. The combination of three women, very different but intimately bound together, makes for a good read. Even though my own journey is so different from theirs, there were many times when the descriptions used to identify their situations spoke exactly to something I have felt. The author is spot on with her characters and their emotions. And she explains them thoroughly but concisely. There's so much material in this book, it would be perfect for discussion groups. I liked it, but I had trouble identifying with the main characters. It seems that growing up South Asian in London is quite different from growing up South Asian in the U.S.! Also, I expected the book to be much funnier than it actually was. Instead of making me laugh, a lot of it just made me feel sad. This is a complex, deep and thoughtful book that portrayed three childhood friends as they grew up. Yes, it's about women but this is not chick lit or light. I marvel at the psychological depth and the tension conveyed in their relationships. I appreciated that the context was the UK and that that had its cultural overlay in the storytelling and the social commentary. I was pleased by the depth and complexity of the characters, all told in the first person. The author intermittently included the voices of neighbors, passersby, etc. and they added insights but it felt somewhat out of place somehow. In conclusion, I readily and happily recommend this book. no reviews | add a review
This novel about friendship, marriage and betrayal, focuses on the difficult choices that contemporary women have to make, whether or not they happen to have been raised in the Asian community. No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)823.914Literature English & Old English literatures English fiction Modern Period 1901-1999 1945-1999LC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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