Ratings6
Average rating4.2
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Series
4 primary booksTetralogi Buru is a 4-book series with 4 primary works first released in 1975 with contributions by Pramoedya Ananta Toer and Max Lane.
Reviews with the most likes.
This is an Indonesian classic, and it's about time I read this!
Having already already watched the 2019 film adaptation featuring Iqbaal Ramadhan an Mawar Eva De Jongh, I'm already familiar with the storyline. However, reading the book was an even better experience because I got to really immerse myself in the story, including all the details that were left out in the film.
I thought the book was great. At its core, it's a political novel, and it serves as a great insight into what life might have been like as a Native in the Dutch East Indies back in the late 1800s. It's quite interesting because as I'm reading this in the 21st century, I realize that my life is vastly different from life back then (e.g. the Dutch no longer rule in the East Indies and Indonesia has become an independent country), and yet, in many ways life is still the same (e.g. the Western world still “rules” Asia and the repercussions of colonialism are still felt).
The main character, Mike, is a Native. Yet unlike most Natives, he lives a very privileged life and attends HBS (Hogere Burgerschool), an elite school even for Europeans and Indos. In a way, he's straddled between two worlds: Natives and Europeans, and doesn't quite fit in either. As someone who is Indonesian but has lived in “Western world” for the past 10 years now, I could really relate to this aspect of the story.
One of my favorite characters in the story is Nyai Ontosoroh, the concubine of a wealthy Dutch man. The fact that most Native women at that time did not receive an education, combined with the fact that as a concubine she constantly faced shame and ridicule makes it even more incredible that throughout the book she continuously shows how smart, wise and strong she is. This makes it even more annoying how Nyai Ontosoroh's own daughter, Annelies Mellema is depicted as such a weak woman. In fact, she's described as a “doll” multiple times throughout the book. I just don't get it.
Overall, I thoroughly enjoyed this book and can't wait to pick up the next one!
This is an Indonesian classic, and it's about time I read this!
Having already already watched the 2019 film adaptation featuring Iqbaal Ramadhan an Mawar Eva De Jongh, I'm already familiar with the storyline. However, reading the book was an even better experience because I got to really immerse myself in the story, including all the details that were left out in the film.
I thought the book was great. At its core, it's a political novel, and it serves as a great insight into what life might have been like as a Native in the Dutch East Indies back in the late 1800s. It's quite interesting because as I'm reading this in the 21st century, I realize that my life is vastly different from life back then (e.g. the Dutch no longer rule in the East Indies and Indonesia has become an independent country), and yet, in many ways life is still the same (e.g. the Western world still “rules” Asia and the repercussions of colonialism are still felt).
The main character, Mike, is a Native. Yet unlike most Natives, he lives a very privileged life and attends HBS (Hogere Burgerschool), an elite school even for Europeans and Indos. In a way, he's straddled between two worlds: Natives and Europeans, and doesn't quite fit in either. As someone who is Indonesian but has lived in “Western world” for the past 10 years now, I could really relate to this aspect of the story.
One of my favorite characters in the story is Nyai Ontosoroh, the concubine of a wealthy Dutch man. The fact that most Native women at that time did not receive an education, combined with the fact that as a concubine she constantly faced shame and ridicule makes it even more incredible that throughout the book she continuously shows how smart, wise and strong she is. This makes it even more annoying how Nyai Ontosoroh's own daughter, Annelies Mellema is depicted as such a weak woman. In fact, she's described as a “doll” multiple times throughout the book. I just don't get it.
Overall, I thoroughly enjoyed this book and can't wait to pick up the next one!
big fan of how this opens up, almost artfully, as a coming-of-age teenager romance kind of novel, before descending into a very involved criticism of europe and imperialism as a whole. the translation reads strangely, which is a little unfortunate, but i got used to it pretty quickly.
i'm surprised by everyone saying that this novel drags? things move pretty quickly, and it's not a very long book either. i also think a lot of the characters were very likable, and i liked toer's female cast a lot, particularly nyai ontosoroh, but also minke's mother, especially in the second half. i didn't expect to be as into this as i am, it was a really pleasant surprise.