Salt and Saffron
Material type:
- 9780747553953
- F/SHA
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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Colombo | F/SHA | Checked out | 02/04/2020 | CA00010372 | ||
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Kandy Fiction | F/SHA |
Available
Order online |
KB104464 |
Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:
The Dard-e-Dils are known for their clavicles and love of stories. Aliya may not have inherited her family's patrician looks, but she is just as much a prey to the legends of her family that stretch back to the days of Timur Lane. Aristocratic and eccentric, the clan has plenty of stories to tell and secrets to hide, particularly its curse of 'not-quite' twins, and it is not long before Aliya begins to believe that she is another 'not-quite twin' cosmically connected with her Aunt Mariam in a way that hardly bodes well.
GBP 8.99
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Reviews provided by Syndetics
Library Journal Review
Shamsie's second novel (following In the City by the Sea) centers on a Pakistani woman caught between the 21st century and her family's feudal past, between salt (ordinary people) and saffron (the elite). Saffron is a luxury, but salt is a necessity, Aliya learns in this charming, witty exploration of class values. In the Dard-e-Dil family, descended from land-rich nawabs, there's a history of "not-quites" (twins, triplets, cousins) who are fated to bring dishonor upon their name. Aliya's "not-quite" is cousin Mariam Apa, who elopes with the cook. Will Aliya repeat history by falling for Khaleel, from Karachi's other side of the tracks? Mysterious Mariam Apa preoccupies Aliya's brooding summer as she tries to make sense of family lore. But center stage is held by her beguiling grandmother, Dadi, beloved by "not-quite" triplet brothers, whose past serves up the climax of this erudite, disarming novel. Shamsie is from a literary/artistic family that includes great-aunt Attia Hosain and mother Muneeza Shamsie (both writers) and filmmaker cousin Waris Hosain. Recommended for all collections.DJo Manning, Barry Univ., Miami Shores, FL (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.Publishers Weekly Review
Clever, witty and inventive, this engaging novel tackles the challenges of reconciling one culture's progressive values with another's allegiance to family and tradition. Shamsie, well-known in her native Pakistan for a prize-winning first novel, In the City by the Sea, writes about Anglo-Indian culture clash with a subtlety and wit that recall Rushdie. Aliya, just graduated from an American college, heads home for the summer to her family in Pakistan for another kind of education, this one focused on the dynamics of class and love and directed by her well-heeled but intolerant relatives. While lively, likable characters with a shared passion for relaying stories from the family's colorful past, Aliya's kin annoy her with their disdain for those who do not share their distinguished lineage. The storied family curse of "not-quite-twins," relatives close in age who share a cosmic connection and disgrace the family's name, becomes more threat than myth when an aunt labels Aliya and her beloved cousin, Mariam Apa, as "not-quites." Indeed, Aliya has been bitterly estranged from a number of her relatives, especially her grandmother Dadi, since their scornful rejection of Mariam, a near-mute who eloped with the family cook. When Aliya finds herself drawn to a Westernized Pakistani whose parents hail from the slums of Karachi, her disillusionment with her family's snobbery and her identification with the unfortunate Mariam intensifies. However, as Aliya leans more about her family's tangled history, especially her grandmother's life and the three men at the center of it brothers divided by India and Pakistan's separation she learns that she, too, has been quick to judge. Her family turns out to be more passionate and complex than Aliya assumes, just as this winning novel resonates more deeply than its lighthearted tone would suggest. (Sept.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reservedBooklist Review
On her way from college in Boston to London, Aliya is asked by her handsome seatmate how much of the family stories she has been telling him are true. "A good storyteller never tells," she replies, and we are as smitten as he. Aliya's tart and supple tale concerns her Pakistani family history, a tangle of grandparents and ancestors and cousins and servants whose lives are so braided with her own that she can recognize a relative by the shape of a clavicle. These are the kind of family reminiscences that cousins whisper to each other and giggle, but they are full of class and caste distinctions drawn from Pakistani, Muslim, British, and American sources. Key to the unwinding is the story of the triplets born before and after midnight of her grandparents' generation, three men who loved not wisely but too well, and Aliya's "not-quite twin" Mariam, the aunt who spoke only to the cook and ate only what he put before her. The utterly sensuous descriptions of food and tea are alone worth the price of admission. --GraceAnne A. DeCandidoKirkus Book Review
Shamsie's second novel ( In the City by the Sea , 1998, not reviewed) concerns the impact of caste, history, family lore, and globalization on a college-age Pakistani woman studying in the States. School's out, so narrator Aliya Dard-e-dil, a masters candidate in education at an American university, flies home to Karachi via London. On the UK leg of the flight, her family stories attract the attention of Khaleel Butt, a westernized Pakistani. Once in London, their second chance encounter occurs, generating the storys only real present-action question: Will Aliya be able to transcend caste distinctions and love the lower-born Khaleel? Members of Aliya's extended family living in London fill her in on what to expect this summer in Karachi, and soon Aliya is off to that city, the novel's final destination. Its here, in a succession of tête-à-têtes with family members, that the mysteries and animosities that haunt the Dard-e-Dils, an aristocratic clan, all resolve. Among them is Aliya's dissing of a family matriarch called Dadi, which stemmed from the disappearance of Aliya's "not-quite" twin, Aunt Mariam, with Masood, the cook. Revelations surrounding these past events lead Aliya to confront her own class prejudices, finally accepting Khaleel despite his own family's address in Karachi. The novels technically flawed: scenes are informational, not dramatic, and are derived from American sitcoms, with endless tongue-in-cheek quipping; the narrator, meanwhile, is in love with her wit, indulging a disastrous predilection for the cute. Apostrophes appear at random, and the occasional invocations of significant poets (John Ashbery, T.S. Eliot) are misleading: the language is pedestrian. An abundance of the novel's abundant back story is reported, often in speechy dialogue. Predictable, sentimental coincidence resolves all of the tale's barley niggling questions. The issue underlying this story is compelling: the tug of tradition on the global soul. Sadly, Shamsie gives us little reason to keep turning the pages. Little, if anything, is at stake for its protagonist.There are no comments on this title.