NMBG 2024

NMBG Nov 2024

Tuesday, June 08, 2010

July book: Burnt Shadows, by Kamila Shamsie



Join us at Mr Hunter's for "Burnt Shadows" by Kamila Shamsie. Shamsie’s complex fifth novel, spanning the years between August 1945 and September 2001, is a story of two inextricably connected and politically impacted families. Berliner Konrad Weiss and Hiroko Tanaka, his translator, meet in Nagasaki and plan to marry. But after he is incinerated by the bomb and she is left permanently scarred, Hiroko journeys to Delhi, home of Konrad’s half-sister, Elizabeth Burton, and her British husband, James. Hiroko bonds with James’ assistant, Sajjad. With Partition between India and Pakistan looming, the Burtons return to England, where their son Henry is in boarding school. Hiroko and Sajjad marry, but they’re not allowed back into India, since Sajjad is a Muslim who “chose to leave.” Shamsie takes up their story 35 years later in Karachi, where they have one son, Raza, after bomb-related miscarriages. Henry appears, searching for his past, and offers to assist with Raza’s education; by 2001, they’re working together for the CIA in the U.S. Shamsie offers a moving look at the “complicated shared history” of these two families, an increasingly common facet of globalization. --
SEE INTERVIEW WITH KAMILA: http://www.amazon.com/gp/mpd/permalink/m3I71LSQ7D8E2

Monday, May 17, 2010

June Book: The Girl with the Dragon Tatoo

Join us in June for "Girl with the Dragon Tattoo". An epic tale of serial murder and corporate trickery spanning several continents, the novel takes in complicated international financial fraud and the buried evil past of a wealthy Swedish industrial family. Through its main character, it also references classic forebears of the crime thriller genre while its style mixes aspects of the sub-genres. There are references to Astrid Lindgren, Enid Blyton, Agatha Christie and Dorothy L. Sayers, as well as Sue Grafton, Val McDermid, Elizabeth George, Sara Paretsky, and several other key authors of detective novels. A journalist and magazine editor in Stockholm until his death, Larsson reveals a knowledge and enjoyment of both English and American crime fiction. He declared that he wrote his opus for his own pleasure in the evenings after work.[1]

Monday, May 10, 2010

May book: Unaccustomed Earth


Join us for the third Lahiri book of the NMBG. She now reaches only a few other authors whose work has ben enjoyed more than twice. Can you name them?

Bengali families struggling to deal with identity and life in the US
From the files of "women we love"