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Interpreter of Maladies

Interpreter of Maladies

List Price: $13.00
Your Price: $9.75
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Thoroughly Enjoyable
Review: In reading Jhumpa Lahiri's stories, I felt as satisfied as if I were reading Alice Munro's or Bharati Mukherjee's work. Lahiri has empathy for her characters as Munro does, and her stories turn on quiet but consequential revelations. One of the best new writers I have read in a long time.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: One worth more than Amazon sells it for!
Review: Jhumpa Lahiri writes with such vision and clarity of prose, it seems the stories she writes could not have been written another way. The stories and characters are so alive that I felt I was no longer reading, but rather witnessing them...standing just a few steps away from the characters.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: more than worth the time
Review: In all honesty, when I first read a story by Ms. Lahiri, I wasn't expecting much. It was just another story in the New Yorker (and if you ask me, that particular magazine has gone south, far, far south). But there was something magical in the simplicity of the story (it was "The Third and Final Continent"). The closing of the story was wonderful, evoking a vague universality in thought and experience. Her use of language isn't exactly terse, yet it excludes unnecessary words that would only bog it down. The sentences are smooth, elegant, even, and direct. It spoke to me as stories should, and all too often don't. I await more Lahiri.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Entrancing!
Review: These short stories provide a lyrical, compelling look into the world of 'otherness': the immigrant, the child, the outcast, the elderly. Ms. Lahiri's beautiful prose immerses us in the bittersweet worlds of her characters. You are sorry when each story is over and think of them long after you're through. A wonderful book!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A fine debut - more please!
Review: This is a terrific collection that evokes what it is like to be an immigrant as well as reminds one of other worlds. The characters are beautifully developed with a rare economy of style. The person below who disliked the book needs to pull her head out and start seeing the book for what it is. Perhaps it is not considered intellectual in Boston to praise books that are both thoughtful and entertaining.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: remarkably poised writing
Review: Lahiri has collected nine stories; most are very much set in Boston and the area around it, with a feel for the universities that help define it, but, there are two or three placed in India. Her writing is deeply domestic: the characters are most comfotable inside their residences, be they apartments or houses. Indeed, a few sem to nearly be shut-ins, and none live heroicly or with grand purpose. Lahiri is quite good at describing the lives of her characters, and gives them a sort of small dignity appropriate to their modest lives. She writes with a settled rhythm, smoothly pacing her stories and never trying to astound the reader. And the writing is good: the imagery is apt, and presented with understatement, and the stories are laid out well. Occassionally, Lahiri does misstep, particularly when we are given an excessively long introduction to Bangladesh in When Mr. Pirzada Came to Dine, but, all in all, the stories come across with strength and clarity, and a kind of grace. Lahiri is, it appears, just one of the many (e.g. Gish Jen, Ha Jin) recent, very good, young writers detailing the experience of Asians, both in America and in their native countries, and beginning to shape a new kind of American literature.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: If you've ever experienced culture shock...
Review: These stories are so touching to me maybe because i have lived in countries other than my own. In her stories, characters either move away or observe other people that have moved away (I especially liked the last story in the book, about the 103-year old landlady). The author has a simple style, very lyric, and her observations are smart and plain, no artifice. I totally disagree with the comment of another customer about the writing being contrite. There's no way this prose could be defined as contrite. I would recommend this book to anyone who wants to read about other culture and who wants to learn about culture shock.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Interpreter of Maladies... A gentle breeze
Review: During the last few months, this book by Jhumpa Lahiri has become one of the popular gift items in our family. And this is for a very good reason. Reading this book was like a gentle breeze with a familer fragrance brushing the sweet memories of a world with hidden treasures. In her stories, Ms. Lahiri has created a magical world with her eloquent and skillful writing. She seems to have an insight into human characters and a capacity of describing a situation to its very essence. Creations and portrayal of characters such as Mr. Pirzada, Mrs. Sen, Mr. Kapasi, Sanjeev, Miranda, Bibi etc, are so realistic that one is tempted to look for them among the acquaintances. She has created stories of unusual depths around insignificant circumstances and with insipid, ordianry but realistic characters. She is a writer with eyes of an artist, who with her skillful descriptions, can create vivid images in the mind of a reader, who is almost transported into the story. As a writer, her strength is in her ability to tell a story and no doubt, she has demonstrated it very well. I have many favorite pieces of her stories, but I like to mention the following excerpts in which I was impressed with her abilites to relate to the minds of the characters she created. In " When Mr. Pirzada Came to Dinner", the child of the host family, wondered about something closer to his world. " Before eating, Mr. Pirzada always did a curious thing. He took out a plain silver watch.....". The child hears about a distant world with all its unrest and war, but cannot relate to it. He tries to find a clue to Mr. Przada's actions which seem strange to him. Another part is the description of the chopping blade in "Mrs. Sen". Through eyes of Eliot, the little boy, the writer describes the blade. This is a superb description, through the eyes of someone who is not familier with the details of the usage of an Indian domestic kithen tool and describes it in his own way. In the final pragraph of "Interprter of Maladies", the writer skillfully ends the story, but leaves the readers to draw their own conclusions about the Das Family and their sense of importance and priorities. ".. the slip of paper with Mr. Kapasi's address on it fluttered away into the wind. No one, but Mr. Kapasi notices." It is hard to interpret the slight ache in this reader's heart that she felt. Was it for Mr. Kapasi or Mrs. Das? Or, was it for Mr. Das? Or was it for Bobby who got abused by the monkeys? My congratulations to Ms Lahiri for her work. I look forward to her future work.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Huge dissapointment and reason not to rely on reviews!
Review: I have been recently exposed to a whole world of SA writers and this has got to rank on the bottom of the list! Never have I found reading so predictable and contrived as Luhiri's "Interpreter of Maladies" I was sorely dissapointed. I purchase books by SA female writer irrespective of the reviews because I feel its one way to support and encourage more SA females to write. Never have I been more dissapointed...especially in light of the hype the Western media has endowed upon Lahiri. Her style of writing is banal and her content, cliche. After I read her book, I switched to non-SA writers. It saddens me that the current SA writers hype after Rushdie and Arundhati Roy's "God of Small Things" the western media would celebrate such a cliche writer in the midst of amazing SA writers (Rohington Mistry, Rushdie, R.K.Narayan, etc). I would not recommend this to ANYONE! If you are truly interested in good SA writers, read ANYTHING by Rohington Mistry, R.K.Narayan, A.Roy, G.Mehta, or C.Banarjee. I would never read anything by this author and would rank her writing on the bottom of the tons of books I have read by SA writers.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: reading it gave me maladies
Review: Don't believe the hype. This was the WORST book I read in the past few years. Trite. Tedious. And completely unoriginal.


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