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The Namesake : A Novel

The Namesake : A Novel

List Price: $24.00
Your Price: $16.32
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Audiobook review
Review: I am writing this review to warn all potential buyers to beware of the audio book. I have searched the web for Jhumpa Lahiri's e-mail address to inform her of the terrible choice she made in allowing Sarita Chowdhury (Mississippi Masala has been) to read her book. She emphasizes unnecessarily and at the wrong points.

The book is terrific, but the reader destroys any interest one might have. Her husky voice is totally inappropriate for this material, and she has no idea on how to pronounce Indian names. And finally, she butchers the central character's name repeatedly as 'goggle', instead of the correct pronounciation 'go-'goal' - I for one should know as I share the same name!

I am not saying that just because this book is about second generation Indian Americans, someone has to read the audiobook in an Indian accent - but it would be beneficial if someone did not butcher the names in a very Western manner. A personal gripe - Ms. Lahiri - you go and get married all traditional in my city Calcutta and yet you cannot republish the book there so that middle class Indians can afford to read your masterpiece!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Go, Jhumpa, go!
Review: I usually read 2-3 pages of a book before falling asleep, but this book - Jhumpa Lahiri's "The Namesake" kept me staying up till 2am in the morning, and the only reason I stopped reading then was because I had to be at work the next morning!

I really liked her observations of things - and often made me wonder how close this was to the author's own real-life experience growing up in New England. Having lived in New York myself, and travelled around the New England states, I could relate to the events in this book.

I was so impressed with this book that I gifted it to several people in the Holidays of 2003. Have a good time reading it yourself!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The best book I've read in the last year.
Review: As soon as I heard about this book, it struck a chord in me being a 1st generation American struggling with my own identity issues, I had to have it. It was beautifully written and pulled me in from the beginning, the birth of Gogol. Following Gogol's adventures as he struggled to find himself and happiness, the reader easily feels as though they're right in that living room with the Bengali feasts spread in front of them, or next door watching as someone dies or someone gets hurt and just trying to help the Ganguli family through the pain. At times, the writing jumps around and you're left with questions, answered a few pages later. But all in all, a wonderful, heartfelt read that helped me on the way to figuring out how to be comfortable with where I'm from and where I'm headed. I am recommending it to everyone young and old, with identity questions or contentedly settled into their own lives.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Two Thumbs Up
Review: Of the recent books my wife and I have both read (she insists we both read them so we can compare - not what I thought of when I said let's keep the marriage interesting, but so be it), there have been a few that we both thought were good. One of the books we agree on is NAMESAKE. We both agree that the writing meanders a little too much to be one we'd consider one of our "great books" but the writing is good and the story is very interesting. The fact that we agree at least that it is a "good book" does say a lot. There are only three books we've agreed on in months and months that we both consider "great" (SECRET LIFE OF BEES, MY FRACTURED LIFE, and THE DA VINCI CODE). Our agreement of NAMESAKE being a "good book" is high praise and can be taken as a thumbs up recommendation by us both.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Enjoyable
Review: I enjoyed this book. Lahiri's writing is beautiful and lives up to the promise of her previous book of short stories. This is not an exciting book, it is not gripping or a page turner, but is a well-written story of an immigrant's life. She makes the ordinary beautiful and moving.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Beautiful and Moving Novel
Review: Lahiri's writing is quite beautiful and simple. This novel is in the present tense and her attention to the details of her characters' lives is effective and poignant. So often in contemporary novels the characters are either unlikable or unbelievable - the events described disturbing or outrageous. This novel suffers neither fault. It would be difficult not to become attached to the members of this family or to read this novel without being haunted by images from their lives.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: ¿It has always felt adopted, an accident of circumstance"
Review: The Namesake is an absolutely gorgeous novel, full of intelligent, detailed, and meticulous insights into the inner thoughts of the Indian immigrant and the nature of man. The universal themes of the immigrant experience, the clash of cultures, the conflicts of assimilation and the tangled ties between generations are woven with an accomplished ease into the story of Gogol Ganguli, and his efforts to come to terms with his family's Indian background, and his own life as an "American."

The Namesake takes the Ganguli family from their life in Calcutta and traces their new life as immigrants in America from 1968 to 2000. After an arranged marriage, Ashoke and Ashima settle together in Cambridge, Massachusetts. The first part of the story is told through Ashima's eyes - the pining for her home and family, the unfamiliar food, the cold winters, the strange language, and the expectation that she has to conform, and to become "western." Half way through the novel, the story arc switches, and Ashima and Ashoke's son Gogol becomes the center of the narrative. Lahiiri effortlessly imparts the inner thoughts of Gogol, as he stumbles through a first generation path strewn with conflicting loyalties, comic detours, and tragic love affairs. There are some wonderful moments of comic drama, particularly when Gogol fraught with tension and rebellion against his background, seeks to have his name changed. And there's also a particularly nice moment, where Gogol meets Maxine, an upper middleclass Manhattan girl, who together with her parents, envelops him with intellectualism and culture, in a subconscious effort to "westernize" him.

There are so many expectations on Gogol. Like the rest of their Bengali friends, his parents expect him to be, if not an engineer, then a doctor, a lawyer, or an economist at the very least. These were the fields that bought them to America, his father repeatedly reminds him, "the professions that have earned them security and respect." Gogol is caught between the vexed results of bringing old ways to a new world, and he is constantly suffering and reminded of the burden of his heritage. Lahiri is completely focused and is in complete control of her narrative; she never lets the storyline falter, and she maintains the drama throughout. The Namesake is a sensitive, fiercely intuitive and beautifully written piece of work.

Michael

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: The discomfort of feeling alien in familiar surroundings
Review: Gogol, born to Indian immigrant parents in Cambridge, MA, is officially an American. But as he grows into uneasy adulthood, he comes to hate his odd nickname, legally changes it to Nikhil, moves into the NY home of typical American WASPs and begins to live what he hopes is the Good Life. But he cannot transcend his roots, and the pains of being somehow different continue to haunt him.
Not as good as Lahiri's Interpreter of Maladies, her first book which won the Pulitzer, but a worthy follow-up and a worthy read.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: namesake, huge jump forward
Review: I just finished reading this book last night, and though I tried as hard as I could to stretch out the experience, it only lasted a week. I couldn't put it down. This novel is written as the best of Ms. Lahiri's stories in Interpreter of Maladies, and the story was as true to the natural history of immigrant life as I myself have observed, being of Gogol's generation here in America. Anyone interested in this genre, wanting to read the story of legions of Indian Americans, will really enjoy this book. (I hope!)

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: The beauty and complexity of ordinary lives
Review: Namesake is the story of a boy named Gogol, the son of Bengali parents who emigrate from India to Massachusetts after his father has a life changing event that inspires him to leave his home in India. When Gogol has the misfortune to have his family pet name, "Gogol" adopted as his "good name", he spends much of his youth explaining the reason that an Indian-American boy is named after a Russian author.

Namesake is fundamentally about ordinary relationships and the often futile attempts we make to connect with one another. Like Lahiri's short stories, there is a certain melancholy to this story as we follow Gogol in various relationships as he searches for an intimacy that he seems unable to obtain. Ironically, his parents -- who meet through an arranged marriage -- seem to have found the kind of intimacy that Gogol longs for. Namesake is also a story of parents and children and the inability of children to see their parents in more than just their role as parents -- to imagine that they had their own hopes and dreams and tragedies.

Lahiri is a beautiful writer and has an incredible ability to convey the subtle nuances and complexities of relationships. The reader identifies with her characters' sadness and ultimately their loneliness. This is Lahiri's first novel and it does feel like a string of short stories more than a cohesive whole, but it is still a very worthwhile read and each vignette is beautiful on its own.


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