Solo Rana Dasgupta
Material type:
- 9780007182152
- 823.92/DAS
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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Colombo | 823.92/DAS |
Available
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CA00028060 | |||
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Colombo On Display | 823.92/DAS |
Available
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CA00013970 | |||
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Kandy | 823.92/DAS | Checked out | 12/04/2025 | KB103340 |
Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:
Winner of the Commonwealth Writer's Prize.
The new novel from the critically acclaimed author of Tokyo Cancelled.
'Solo' recounts the life and daydreams of a reclusive one-hundred-year-old man from Bulgaria.
Before the man lost his sight, he read this story in a magazine: a group of explorers came upon a community of parrots speaking the language of a society that had been wiped out in a recent catastrophe. Astonished by their discovery, they put the parrots in cages and sent them home so that linguists could record what remained of the lost language. But the parrots, already traumatised by the devastation they had recently witnessed, died on the way.
Wondering if, unlike the hapless parrots, he has any wisdom to leave to the world, Ulrich embarks on an epic armchair journey through a century of violent politics, forbidden music, lost love and failed chemistry, finding his way eventually to an astonishing epiphany of tenderness and enlightenment.
Excerpt provided by Syndetics
Reviews provided by Syndetics
Library Journal Review
This new work by Dasgupta (Tokyo Cancelled) is two novels in one book. The first, Life, follows precocious Bulgarian chemist Ulrich, who cannot outrun his country's decline and so must suffer with it; the second, Daydreams, shows us a "better" world imagined by Ulrich in which talented and ambitious youth-Khatuna and Boris, mainly-can escape the uncertainty of a post-Communist culture. Essentially, this work is a meditation on regret. In Life, Ulrich makes it to Germany but is forced home by his mother's sorrowful letters. His talent is forgotten amid a landscape of factories. Then Daydreams clears the air. After reading the details of Ulrich's devastating decline, we are perhaps more willing to forgive Khatuna's tremendous violence and Boris's waywardness if it leads to success (relatively speaking). And it does. VERDICT The sedimentary structure-layering stories of opportunity and oppression-makes Solo a double pleasure: readers can enjoy Dasgupta's imagination but must also confront problems of celebrity and commerce. Part historical fiction, part heartbreak, part pop culture; think Aleksandar Hemon.-Stephen Morrow, Ohio Univ., Athens (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.Publishers Weekly Review
Winner of the U.K.'s Commonwealth Prize, Dasgupta's second book (after Tokyo Canceled) is bold, enigmatic, and thought-provoking. After his pragmatic father crushes Ulrich's passion for music, he turns to chemistry, a subject that takes him to Berlin, "the capital of world science," during the ebb of the Ottoman Empire. He works alongside researchers on the forefront of discovery and shares the halls with Albert Einstein. But WWI forces him back home to Bulgaria and into a bookkeeping job at a chemical plant, where years of political upheavals leading to communism drive Ulrich into a private world of experimentation that ends decades later when he's blinded in an accident. Yet his mind remains very much alive, and the "second movement" of the book reveals a richly imagined world involving a Bulgarian musical prodigy, an American executive, and Georgian siblings whose lives all intersect in New York. With this ambitious structure, Dasgupta's subtle architecture gives rise to questions of modernity, memory, and human failures. Lucid prose and a narrative scheme both demanding and inchoate reveal a writer beginning to deploy his considerable powers. (Feb.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.Booklist Review
Following his critically acclaimed debut, Tokyo Cancelled (2005), Dasgupta presents two loosely connected novels. The first, set in Bulgaria, follows Ulrich, from privileged boyhood at the dawn of the last century to destitute old age. As decades evaporate in a whirl of revolution, war, and political upheaval, Ulrich's possibilities shrink and his life grows increasingly narrow. Yet the meagerness of his circumstances belies the richness of his inner daydreams, which form the second half of the novel. A new set of characters, vividly imagined by Ulrich, ultimately collide in modern-day New York. (One is a writer, allowing Dasgupta to flex his considerable poetic talent.) The first half moves at a stately pace, while the second throbs to a twenty-first-century beat, with pieces of Ulrich's real life cleverly repurposed to create an echo effect. With an intriguing bifurcated storytelling device, this is a novel of dazzling ideas and emotion in which Dasgupta comes to astonishingly beautiful and original conclusions about love, loss, and aging, and his protagonist realizes There is far more to us than what we live. --Wetli, PattyCopyright 2010 BooklistThere are no comments on this title.