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I thought
that this book would come closest to my heart as it focuses so avidly
on the link between food and love, my two major preoccupations!
The tale is told in two strands - one about an upper class Indian
family torn part by the partition of India & Pakistan in 1947;
the other a modern-day view of one of these genealogical branches.
Author Kamila Shamsie even takes the trouble of drawing a family
tree lest the reader loses track of the plot. And herein lies the
problem of the book - a thin plot with too many dead-end branches
being needlessly explored.
Shamsie
uses the "not quite twins" theme to link the characters
of the past to those of today. A ruse used in all families to help
explain how a child born four generations later can resemble an
ancestor so closely. Of course, science can readily explain this
with its theory of dominant and recessive genes. Interestingly,
Shamsie focuses more on the personality traits rather than the physical
similarities between her linked characters.
The
book examines the Dard-e-Dil family microscopically. Why does Aunt
Miriam elope with the cook? Is it because his gastronomic skills
win over her heart? Is it because she can't face the thought of
losing such a wonderful cook? Or is she just rebelling against an
arranged marriage to a partner from the same class. And herein is
the crux of this book - Class. Upper class masters, lower class
servants. The Indian caste system versus the Pakistan class system.
American-educated Aliya, fifth generation Dard-e-Dil is the daughter
of Naser & Ayesha who is returning home to Pakistani when she
meets Khaleel Butt on the plane. Khaleel 'Cal' also American-educated
is from the "wrong side of the tracks", hailing from Liquatabad
in Karachi. Aliya's cousin Samia sums up the position neatly "the
poor live in Liaquatabad. The Poor, the lower classes, the not-us.
How else do you want me to put this? There's no one we know who
would have exchanged Karachi phone number with him, Aloo".
The classes clash once again and Aliya is left wondering if she
is "not quite twins" with her aunt Miriam, destined to
elope with a lower class partner.
In
this novel, Shamsie describes an upper-middle class existence in
Pakistan. A sheltered, indulged life that is perhaps not shared
by many of the readers. On her return to Karachi, Aliya unravels
the mystery of Aunt Miriam and the reader is left wondering if its
resolution will help Aliya win her man.
Although
I enjoyed Shamsie's style of writing; she has a good ear for the
modern-day Urdu-English vernacular and the pages devoted to details
of food are mouth-watering; I found the whole story static and a
little fairy-tale like . Shamsie's food, though, deserves a special
mention: from succulent kebabs to delicately spiced lamb and the
aromatic biryanis - such gastronomic attention to details brought
a tear to my eye and a rumble in my stomach.
Click
here to buy this book today!

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