To brighten
our night
& to lighten
our blight
Lamps, to enliven
we light.
The setting is different too, Japan this time. And the main theme that I fathomed from the read is the Fatherhood – an initiation and journey – but under highly unconventional and melancholic circumstances.
Rich, informative descriptions of Japanese landscapes, weather, homes and culture add an authentic feel to the read.
Story
The story begins slowly, but surely and stays steady while it builds up some suspense along the way, right till the very end. A few unexpected twists and turns pepper the emotions with sadness and loss.
Benjamin has made some mistakes in his life. He puts his glowing career and marriage with Addy at stake when he follows his heart, that takes him all the way to Japan. What happens there? Does he have a joyous reunion with his former love Hanako? Or does a new relationship blossom with her friend Tomoko? The book explores multiple layers of man-woman relationships and the complications that come with them. It also explores the challenges of fatherhood, for a clueless man in the process of re-discovering himself.
It is a display of how cultural differences play havoc with love and relationships. Further, language barriers cause heartbreak, pain and irreversible loss. The immigration challenges of fetching a loved one across international borders is showcased well. Amidst all of this, sprouts innocence and purity, in the form of a child, Aiko – Love Child – that is bound to tug at the heartstrings of readers.
Characters
Benjamin and Hanako showcase love that transcends all barriers of culture, nationality, language and race. Addy, as the wife is typically convincing. Additional characters like that of Tomoko showcase the hardships of women caught in a quagmire of lost ‘foreign’ love and societal barriers.
One’s heart goes out to the grandmother Obasan, though. It is heartbreaking how she loses her close loved ones, especially towards the end.
Narration
The smooth and flawless narrative style enhanced with the flashbacks that keep adding meat to the present. Every new chapter opens up another view into the past and either solves a piece of some puzzle or peppers the story with more suspense. It is slow and steady, a kind of style where one can relax with a glass of wine, only to back up and absorb the shock of yet another twist that arrives without warning.
The descriptions add meaning to the storyline. The bathing ritual of washing oneself while seated on a stool, before entering the bathtub – another interesting contraption with multiple seating arrangements within it – are eye-openers to the culture of the Japanese. The food descriptions are mouth-watering as well, in their healthy simplicity.
The most interesting aspect is how Japanese words and dialogues add authenticity to the confusion and misunderstanding that is crucial to the storyline.
Conclusion
I rate the book 4.5 out of 5. Extra points for bringing out the cultural differences and societal nuances with aplomb.
Do follow my blog for more reviews. Happy reading, readers.
***
Build a life that is content
and happy on the inside
irrespective of how it
appears to others
on the outside.
What looks like a cage
to the world may be
a nest of peace to
the one inside it.
And vice versa.
***
Image:pinterest
...to seeking opportunities to wet our feet...
We all grew up into childhood again.
***
Image:pinterest
& banish
the procrastination
to increase the
productivity.
Every new day
is yet another opportunity
to enhance your success
& reach for your dreams.
***
#Motivation
Image:pinterest
The topic in
question is love, with all its rules and demands of propriety to cater to
demands of rules, drawn by society. However, there is a larger, sinister
backdrop to it – a brutal senseless murder, loss, loneliness, fear and the
journey towards recovery.
Most important is
the powerful social message about the horrifying gun-culture rampant in America.
Characters
Sensitive,
well-etched out characters seem to be this author’s forte. Bill Masters is in
pain, trying to cope and the edge of his tether of sanity. The suicidal progression,
where a victim of trauma kills himself without doing anything, but sleep at
home, seems to have already kicked in when the entry of a girl changes
everything.
It is a nice twist that
the girl is an exchange student, from China, of all the places. Bill Masters
and Wendy Wang, an unlikely pair with an age-difference that merits her calling
him 'Daddy' in all innocence.
The protective
instincts coupled with suppressed desire waging war within a middle-aged man is
what the story is all about. The flashback events of Bill’s family are
portrayed with smart revelations of what’s needed at any given point and yet, retain
ample suspense to allow surprise as the story moves along.
As in the other
books I’ve read of the author, his characters fight convention, either in a
mild but assertive way or in a blatant, nonchalant way – the latter seems to be
the forte of the female characters, which makes the story all the more
compelling to read.
Story
I liked how the story
began right in the middle of the angst, after the killings have happened. The
suspense is built up, un earthing layers little by little. The awkward
situation of a middle-aged man having to host a teenage girl in his home, is
brought out with finesse. The change in the equation between them is
unpredictable and adds to the suspense. The angst of death and thrill of
constant danger makes this story a compelling package.
I was surprised by
the end, again, as in the other books. I expected something similar to the last
one I read, A Beautiful Chill.
Stephen Swartz
writes against convention, his stories examine the crux of what forms ‘proper’ code
of behaviour and whether that code always makes sense under different,
difficult circumstances, or not.
Narration
Simple
straight-forward narration with impeccable vocabulary makes the book an easy
read. It is amusing how the Chinese Wendy leaves out articles in her sentences
and the English teacher in Bill keeps correcting her, almost to no avail.
The pun on Mister Masters,
the English master is not lost on the reader. The slang of America, which makes
little sense, especially for words like Daddy, is showcased with finesse. Wendy’s
questions bring out the loopholes in the commonly used slang, when she tries to
understand why Daddy has sinister connotations or when she asks her friends what
they say when somebody is just sleeping next to someone, without making love. I
am sure a lot of us would want to know, given the tricky contortions rampant in
the common vocabulary.
Conclusion
There are bad men
in the world, yes there are. There are also many psychos, even teenaged ones,
who need help and aren’t getting any. There are guns, available to these psychos
to go on a rampage and kill innocents, to make statements.
Amidst all this,
are a few good men. Men who try and succeed in retaining their innate sense of
decency and immaculate behaviour. Most important is the respect some men retain
for the woman race, even when opportunity taunts their mind or while their hormones
may be raging for release. Bill, who never
takes advantage of the innocent (or not-so-innocent) Wendy is an eye-opener and
reminder to people who are tired of the ‘dirty old men’ of society. And yes,
there is a strong statement of the license to love between consenting adults, unwritten
rules be damned.
And for this portrayal
of the sensitive morality of the good men, I rate extra points for the book
with 4.7 out of 5.
Do my reviews strike a
chord? Follow my blog for more.
Happy reading,
readers.
***
English Literature
students will have much to learn from Stephen Swartz’s books, that draw from
his long expertise as an English professor.
Characters
Two protagonists
immersed in their own despair discover one another in more ways than one. Their
inner turmoil equals the pressure that the world around them – relatives,
colleagues and friends – who wield subtle and not-so-subtle influences over
them. Both of them would make highly interesting psychological studies.
All the other
characters gain importance as and when they come along and add their crucial
bits, into the equation brewing between the Eric and Iris. Even the minor
characters assume importance in how they change or affect the processes going
on within the minds of the two main characters. Each character is powerful, in
the way he or she affects the thinking on one or both the key players in the
story.
Storyline
Eric’s self-doubts
make our hearts go out to him as much as they do for Iris’s childhood trauma. How
her trauma refuses to let go of her, until it becomes irreversible forms the
crux of the story.
Eric’s inner
struggles with respect to how people around him would perceive him are compelling.
His passionate speech about the loneliness of a single middle-aged man in a
hormone-challenging environment are eye-openers to the society, that is often
blind to the human aspect of the male populace.
The fragile
equation between a middle-aged son and his parents put to test when his
carefree girlfriend meets them, is dealt with in its ridiculously humourous,
yet completely serious finesse.
The Wicca rituals,
witch references add a mythical touch, even as the Icelandic legends weave
themselves into the story. This makes it a rare enmeshing of ancient myth into
modern reality, minus any supernatural or paranormal inclusions.
It takes some
psychological knowhow to comprehend the erratic (especially sexual and sometimes
nudist) behaviour of a character like Iris. The various interpretations by
other characters may either add new dimensions or further confuse a clueless
reader, thus augmenting the depth in her character.
What remains a
strong motif throughout the story is the theme of reversal or opposites – the
typical dating ritual in reverse, the female, rather than male promiscuity,
perceived strength or weakness of the male species, the blatant lack of secrecy
of the woman in a gossip-riddled judgmental environment, and many more.
It is also interesting
to read the tendency for often malicious gossip, that seems to perforate even
the supposed modern, or culturally advanced university environment of America.
It underlines the fact that the innate character of human beings essentially
remains quite the same, irrespective of where they exist in the world.
Narrative
The matter-of-fact,
non-judgmental narration works well for topics that are as sensitive as this
one. There is absolutely no hint of narrator’s ‘voice’ to be gleaned from even
the most ludicrous behavioural/thinking processes of the characters.
I completely loved
the references to Shakespeare, especially his plays. The analyses of some of
the Bard’s plays woven neatly into the story’s narrative are brilliant and add a
realistic turn to the University classroom setting and sequences.
Conclusion
I rate the book 4.6
out of 5. Extra points for the brilliant insightful analyses of English and
intriguing Icelandic Literature woven into the story and narrative.
Do follow my blog if my reviews are interesting. Happy reading, readers!
***
The biggest pull of the novel is the protagonist and the fact that it is true story of a real woman, although the author admits to have fictionalized the end, which adds on to the allure of a perfect climactic finish.
I am looking forward to my next reads A Beautiful Chill and Exchange by this author. Lined up for the future are Aiko and Year of the Tiger too.
Characters
Readers will totally love Wolf. She is cute and endearing, real and fun-loving, but strong and inspiring. Her unbidden humour enhances the irony of her precarious situations, even as it showcases her quick resilient spirit. Her extraordinary transformation from Anuka to ‘Anna Good’ is compelling in its honest admittance of the challenges of her journey.
Anna’s sister is a reminder of goodness in the world.
Her unbending support of a newfound sister, although with tinges of
selfishness, still endears readers throughout the story.
The men are interesting character studies, going by the
way they are shown with ruthless honesty. Their immaturity, which stems from
wanting the privileges of marriage, minus the responsibilities that come with
it, is showcased well in all the key male characters in the sisters’ lives. Right from 'the man with the red beard' of her childhood to the 'husbands' she is stuck with after motherhood, the key men are shown to play crucial roles in shaping the direction of her life.
The innate throes and challenges of motherhood
especially sans the support of the father(s) is portrayed to ruthless
perfection.
The latter half of the book where the typical male
chauvinism breeds incredulity in the male soldiers brings out amusing humourous
and patient shades of Anna are enjoyable to read. It reminded me of the
Bollywood movie Gunjan Saxena where the lady helicopter pilot faces the
chauvinistic antagonism of her male team members.
Setting
The whole premise of the book is a journey of learning for me. Although we learn much from all reads, irrespective of whether they are fiction or non-fiction, books that are set in alien cultures and settings that are far removed from our own always hold that edge over the rest.
The setting of the novel holds the reader intrigued
from the word go. The inherent danger of the surroundings with brutal weather
conditions of Greenland, lack of comfort or amenities, compounded by danger of human and
animal predators makes for a thrilling read.
Storyline
One has an inkling about the story from the
title. However, nothing prepares the reader for the sheer shock of encountering
the uncomfortable truths that are unraveled layer by layer, in the story.
Although the topic is not newin itself, the handling of the story-telling, is
compelling. The initial chapters in the voice of a child is heart-wrenching and
brings out the innate human strength and spirit that is embedded in the
helpless weakness of a child.
I was flabbergasted towards the end of the novel where the very torturous childhood trauma becomes the main source of resilience, will and fighting acumen of the girl called Wolf. And the irony is that in a twisted but realistic way, the story proves that humans, especially women are capable of rising from every ordeal and convert the very damage into combat if necessary. The author has ensured that this facet is brought out brilliantly, in a totally convincing manner.
The rise of Wolf is no less than phenomenal. I absolutely loved the complete transformation – physical mental and psychological – that Wolf undergoes in the second half. The hunting scenes are absolutely brilliant and is sure to make every woman’s head rise a few notches in pride.
The novel is an insight into complicated relationships between men and women and everything in-between. This is the first book that deals with intimacy, including gay and lesbian relationships without the accompanying sleaze that we read in most books.
Narration
The first-person narration enhances the personal connect for the readers with the story. The child’s voice that is steeped in innocence, even while recounting horrors of lustful men or dangers of the wild instill fear for her safety and garners admiration for her courage.
The matter-of-fact tone in which Wolf narrates her
story, including her sexual liaisons with multiple men or her boxing prowess
alike make it devoid of sleazy undertones or grisly violence. There are
cringe-worthy scenes during intimacy nor gory details even while describing
brutal rape or extreme violence. This is where the author’s writing prowess
scores over most others.
Spoiler Alert: I absolutely loved the fight scenes, be it in the ring or on the snow every one of them was enjoyable. Even to the very end, the way her mind absorbs physical pain and maintains calm is astounding.
The wolf’s hunt is breathtaking in its thrilling
detail.
And I totally loved the tagline that is a powerful motif throughout the book. I’m sure all the readers would agree.
Conclusion
I rate the novel a clean 4.8 out of 5 (amounts to a 5/5 star Amazon rating). Call it my womanly prejudice if you may, but I totally love and devour books that showcase the Phoenix in a woman, that rises out of her ashes of hardship and despair in life.
Found my review enlightening? Do follow my blog for more.
Happy reading, readers.
***