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Loading... The God of Small Things (original 1997; edition 1997)by Arundhati Roy (Author)
Work InformationThe God of Small Things by Arundhati Roy (1997)
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. The God of small things By Arundhati Roy This novel about Rahel and her twin brother Estha, mainly set in 1969 during their childhood in Kerala, India is a memorable read. The death of their cousin is known from the beginning, but the author still kept me interested by unraveling the full story layer by layer. Mostly told from the perspective of 7 year old Rahel, the novel started out sweet and sometimes funny, grew sadder and darker over the course of the book. The writing is overly descriptive and took me a while to get into, but it makes sense at the end, when I realized it's what this novel is about after all, the small things and how everything can change in a day. I would definitely recommend this book, a heartbreaking read though, be aware of the trigger warnings. This novel is masterful. Roy's prose is poetry, or near as. With coinages, imagery, and heartbreaking emotion, she transports you to rural Kerala and places you among the cast of the novel across the generations they span. I've just put the book down, and am attempting to extinguish the lingering feeling of oppressive, impending doom that has sat with me throughout the book. More incredibly to me, I enjoyed it, as someone who tends to avoid doom and its impending arrival at as many opportunities as possible. Roy boldly tells you what is going to happen in the very first pages, and unfolds the path to get there beautifully, keeping you entranced not by suspense but with the weight of inevitability. I didn't think it would work until I read it. Inevitability is not just the feeling of the book, it's also a theme. There is history, and there is History. We might take the former as a set of facts, and the latter as facts personified, empowered to affect the ways in which we live. The titular God of Small Things is a the personal tragedies that fall victim to History, when the things we want and need are unreachable because of History's designs and strictures. How free are we, when we live amidst ideology, tradition, family, society? Are we free to live, to love? I won't say this novel gives me hope that we are. I don't even think it makes it clear that we will be; this is a tragedy and History can be ruthless with those that rebel against it. What it does do, is remind me that we should be, because the cost of living constrained thus is far too high a price to pay.
If Ms. Roy is sometimes overzealous in foreshadowing her characters' fate, resorting on occasion to darkly portentous clues, she proves remarkably adept at infusing her story with the inexorable momentum of tragedy. She writes near the beginning of the novel that in India, personal despair ''could never be desperate enough,'' that ''it was never important enough'' because ''worse things had happened'' and ''kept happening.'' Yet as rendered in this remarkable novel, the ''relative smallness'' of her characters' misfortunes remains both heartbreaking and indelible. Has as a reference guide/companionHas as a student's study guideAwardsDistinctionsNotable Lists
In 1969 in Kerala, India, Rahel and her twin brother, Estha, struggle to forge a childhood for themselves amid the destruction of their family life, as they discover that the entire world can be transformed in a single moment. No library descriptions found. |
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tre mesi diu vento e pioggia, con brevi incantesimo di sole aspro e brillante che i bambini elettrizzati rubano per i loro giochi ( )