Ratings26
Average rating4.3
These eight stories by beloved and bestselling author Jhumpa Lahiri take us from Cambridge and Seattle to India and Thailand, as they explore the secrets at the heart of family life. Here they enter the worlds of sisters and brothers, fathers and mothers, daughters and sons, friends and lovers. Rich with the signature gifts that have established Jhumpa Lahiri as one of our most essential writers, Unaccustomed Earth exquisitely renders the most intricate workings of the heart and mind.
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One sentence synopsis... Eight stories - some interwoven, most not - of people transplanted from their homes and setting down new roots in foreign environments.
Read it if you like... Jane Austen - for the forensic precision into family habits, customs, and pressures with love versus arranged marriage plots.
Further reading... anything by Lahiri. She circles the same themes of the immigrant experience and family disconnect between generations in every book but every time gets closer and closer to literary perfection.
Unaccustomed Earth is Lahiri's third book, with two collections of short stories and one novel. She seems to know the immigrant experience, the loneliness, the out-of-sync feeling with the rest of the world. Her characters try to form new bonds and try to change to fit the new world in which they are living. The title comes from a Hawthorne quote that promotes the benefits moving into new soil, both for plants and for people. These benefits are subtle in the stories presented here and only occur after an initial crisis of transplanting takes place.
This book is a collection of stories about Indians who have moved away from their motherland. It's about their lives and trials and tribulations and most of the stories have no happy endings. Still the author's writing is exceptional and I read through the book faster than I expected too.
Required reading for desi's. Makes you cry and wonder if your parents know you and stuff, you know, the usual