Customer Reviews for Unaccustomed Earth

Unaccustomed Earth by Jhumpa Lahiri

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Book Reviews of Unaccustomed Earth

Book Review: Exquisite
Summary: 5 Stars

This book is a series of stories and the first story hooked me immediately. It really pulled at my heart chakra. It was subtle and beautiful. As I read the first story on the plane, I found that I was often smiling to myself, as the interaction between the grandfather and grandson really touched me...not in a sentimental way, but in a subtle and deep way...if that makes any sense at all.

I found that with the start of each new story, I was a wee bit reluctant to leave the last characters behind, so it took me a few pages to get into each story. But once I was in, I really enjoyed it.

The last section - three stories about two characters named Hema and Kaushik - was just exquisite. That is the best and really perfect word to describe this piece of work. Lahiri says so much about connection and karma and the complexity of origin, love and loss, without saying anything at all specifically about those topics. The intereaction between the characters is everything. Lahiri is an excellent story-teller. Her style is steady, subtle and powerful all at the same time. I would definitely recommend this book to anyone who is interested in how humans connect with one another in various ways, or in the many, many different permutations of the concepts of family and origin.

Book Review: Lyrical metaphor
Summary: 5 Stars

This is a book of short stories, some of which are inter related. Lahiri is so good at depicting what it's like to be in families, in relationships. There's compromise, pig headedness, hidden or displayed anger, suffering both long and short, isolation but most of
all love. What really stood out to me was how even subtle but sometimes big occurences between people who have formed strong bonds can change the trajectory of their lives, in positive or negative ways. The connection never dies. The love never dies. And it
influences all their subsequent relationships. The last 3 stories read like diaries or love letters between a couple whose lives interlock into early middle age. It's amazing how they influence one another. though probably through most of the relationship, they would
both deny that connection. Even people who chose NOT to relate to others, to step out of relationship, are still relating by that absence. They leave a whole int the others life by not communicating. After a strong bond is forged there's no way NOT to impact the 'other'. One or both can turn their back on the connection but it's as if the connections lives on independent of behavior or choices. Also, not to be missed is Lahiri's lyrical use of metaphor. I'll be reading more of her.

Book Review: "Unaccustomed Earth" by Jhumpa Lahiri
Summary: 5 Stars

In the opening review pages of Lahiri's "Interpreter of Maladies," one critic wrote that Lahiri's writing style makes one forget that they are reading. I agree with this, and attest it to her absolute skill in her craft. Her work is like literary comfort food to me. "Unaccustomed Earth" can very well be her richest, most mature work yet. Her stories are intimate yet universal, ethnic yet wholly American, stark yet warm, and always told with a firm yet gentle style that makes these characters and their troubles haunt you long after you are finished visiting them. The majority of Lahiri's work here is somber in tone, but her plots and characters are somehow relateable. Her characters are always simply human, and have issues in misunderstandings with parents, children, lovers, and addictions. You want to spend whole characters, but her final three loosely connected short stories are somehow complete, and enough in themselves.

Read and enjoy this book. It is entertaining but will stay and resonate with you. Lahiri makes the reader introspective and heightens their awareness of life and literature. I cannot praise her work enough, and look forward to returning to these stories again as I do with her earlier work. Exquisite stuff.

Book Review: Exquisite
Summary: 5 Stars

Being critical and judgemental, I am usually moved to write a review when I think a book is being over praised. In this case, overpraising is impossible. While lacking the elusive, magical dimension of The Interpreter of Maladies, these stories may be even better in their depth, warmth, and maturity.

As is usual in Lahiri, the stories focus on people raised in two cultures, Bengali and American, and not feeling fully a part of either. An additional theme of this book is withdrawal and withholding from others, failing to make a vital connection. This is illustrated often by withholdoing information. In the title story, an aging, widowed father withholds the secret of his new found independence and love affair from his adult daughter while on a visit to her home where he bonds with his grandson. In "Only Goodness" a wife withholds the secret of her brother's alcoholism from her husband until it is almost too late. In a third, part of a linked series of three stories, a family withholds the knowledge that the mother is dying from the family that shelters them in American. In this case, the secret deepens the bond of the son and daughter of each family.

I did not want this book to end. I wish she would write more.

Book Review: Outstanding
Summary: 5 Stars

Jhumpa Lahiri just keeps getting better and better. "Unaccustomed Earth" is her third book and her second collection of short stories. I'm amazed that she was able to top "Interpreter of Maladies" with such rich, emotional portraits of love and loss. This book contains eight stories, three of which are linked together, and like all of Lahiri's previous works, each story focuses on individuals from Bengali families who are now living in the U.S. The title story revolves around Ruma, a woman who feels obligated to ask her widowed father to move into the home she shares with her father and son. Other highlights from the book include "Only Goodness," which revolves around an older sister's sense of duty toward her alcoholic brother; "Nobody's Business," a story of an American man who falls in love with his unavailable Indian roommate; and "Hema and Kaushik," three related stories that chronicle the relationship between two characters that spans more than 20 years.

Lahiri is one of the most prominent writers of modern fiction, and "Unaccustomed Earth" is another flawless collection of prose. I recommend this book to everyone, and strongly encourage you to check out the author's other two works as well.
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