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Nazneen's inauspicious entry
to the world, an apparent stillbirth on the hard mud floor of a
Bangladeshi village hut, imbues in her a sense of fatalism that she
carries across continents when she is married off to Chanu. Her life in
London's Tower Hamlets is, on the surface, calm. For years, keeping
house and rearing children, she does what is expected of her. Yet
Nazneen walks a tightrope stretched between her daughters' embarrassment
and her husband's resentments. Chanu calls his elder daughter the little
memsahib. `I didn't ask to be born here,' say Shahana, with regular
finality.
Into that fragile peace walks Karim. He sets questions before her, of
longing and belonging; he sparks in her a turmoil that reflects the
community's own; he opens her eyes and directs her gaze - but what she
sees, in the end, comes as a suprise to them both.
While Nazneen journeys along her path of self-realization, a way haunted
by her mother's ghost, her sister Hasina, back in Bangladesh, rushes
headlong at her life, first making a `love marriage', then fleeing her
violent husband. Woven through the novel, Hasina's letters from Dhaka
recount a world of overwhelming adversity. Shaped - yet ultimately not
bound - by their landscapes and memories, both sisters struggle to dream
themselves out of the rules prescribed for them.
Beautifully rendered and, by turns, both comic and deeply moving, Brick
Lane establishes Monica Ali as one of the most exciting new voices in
fiction..
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