The pace of the novel was wonderful. We start with Ashoke and Ashima (our lovely couple) but the plot is focused on their firstborn Gogol. With views from all three of them, the mixture of cultural love, misunderstanding, and tradition combine to give a balanced approach to this intercultural exchange. With less than 300 pages, Gogol is born into the world and we leave him middle-aged. Lahiri excels with her combinations of past stories from Ashoke and Ashima's Indian life with Gogol's American present. On this line of past and present, future and tradition, we find the centerpiece of our story: Gogol's namesake.
"Though there are only inches between them, for an instant his father is a stranger, a man who has kept a secret, has survived a tragedy, a man whose past he does not fully know."
Wonderful author: Jhumpa Lahiri. |
I don't know if I would read the story again, but I certainly suggest it. Not to mention those who are following a read list//reading challenge can cross of "Pulitzer Prize Winner". I was pleasantly surprised by that.
Onto book #2!
Emily