Rating: ****
Tags: Lang:en
Publisher: Mariner Books
Added: April 4, 2020
Modified: November 5, 2021
Summary
Jhumpa Lahiri's
Interpreter of Maladies established this young
writer as one the most brilliant of her generation. Her
stories are one of the very few debut works -- and only a
handful of collections -- to have won the Pulitzer Prize for
fiction. Among the many other awards and honors it received
were the New Yorker Debut of the Year award, the
PEN/Hemingway Award, and the highest critical praise for its
grace, acuity, and compassion in detailing lives transported
from India to America. In
The Namesake , Lahiri enriches the themes that made
her collection an international bestseller: the immigrant
experience, the clash of cultures, the conflicts of
assimilation, and, most poignantly, the tangled ties between
generations. Here again Lahiri displays her deft touch for
the perfect detail -- the fleeting moment, the turn of phrase
-- that opens whole worlds of emotion.
The Namesake takes the Ganguli family from their
tradition-bound life in Calcutta through their fraught
transformation into Americans. On the heels of their arranged
wedding, Ashoke and Ashima Ganguli settle together in
Cambridge, Massachusetts. An engineer by training, Ashoke
adapts far less warily than his wife, who resists all things
American and pines for her family. When their son is born,
the task of naming him betrays the vexed results of bringing
old ways to the new world. Named for a Russian writer by his
Indian parents in memory of a catastrophe years before, Gogol
Ganguli knows only that he suffers the burden of his heritage
as well as his odd, antic name. Lahiri brings great empathy
to Gogol as he stumbles along the first-generation path,
strewn with conflicting loyalties, comic detours, and
wrenching love affairs. With penetrating insight, she reveals
not only the defining power of the names and expectations
bestowed upon us by our parents, but also the means by which
we slowly, sometimes painfully, come to define ourselves.
The New York Times has praised Lahiri as "a writer
of uncommon elegance and poise."
The Namesake is a fine-tuned, intimate, and deeply
felt novel of identity. **