
Love Marriage
A Novel
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
- دیدگاه کاربران
نقد و بررسی

December 10, 2007
Several generations of a Sri Lankan family touched by the country’s civil war confront the limits of ethnic and familial allegiance in Ganeshananthan’s forceful but patchy debut. First-generation American Yalini, daughter of Sri Lankan Tamil parents Vani and Murali, is an awkward 22-year-old who has spent her youth burdened by family secrets from their lives before emigration. Confronted with her enigmatic dying uncle, Kumaran, who had a shadowy role in Sri Lanka’s insurgent Tamil Tigers, Yalini is driven to examine her relatives’ marriages as a means of figuring out their alliances and her own unsettled identity. Her parents fell in love in New York and escaped arranged marriages back home; her grandparents, aunts and uncles have their own stories; Kumaran’s 18-year-old daughter chooses to wed a Tamil Tiger financier. Written in short blocks of text, the book is structured as a kind of day book where Yalini records her progress. Repetitions create a meditative mood, but dull the book’s emotional core and make emphasis on marriage seem forced. The most vivid character, Rajie, the daughter of an old family friend, appears only briefly. And the issues that plague Yalini remain vague until the last third of the novel, when the narrative suddenly takes on real power.

February 1, 2008
Born of Sri Lankan immigrants, Ganeshananthan presents a contemplative debut novel thatportrays the waysone extended Sri Lankan family copes with displacement, a break with tradition, opposing political persuasions, and guiltafter the beginnings of Sri Lankas dissolution in 1983. Yalini, the narrator, is born that very year in Connecticut to parents united in alove marriage instead of themore typical arranged pairing. Theirfamilies are still living in Sri Lanka andare not quite speaking, and neither knowing exactly why. As Yalini matures into a modern American woman, she listens to the stories of aunts and uncles, cousins and grandparents, and their marriagesmost arranged, some happy, and somethat go on even when they should not. She also learns the painful lesson that ones relatives do not always share ones politics, as she gradually becomes privy to family secrets and resentments shut up in the cool and quiet cabinet of memory. Written in sparse vignettes replete with emotional recollections of the past, Ganeshananthans first novel imagines a rich and haunting family history.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2008, American Library Association.)
دیدگاه کاربران