The Namesake: A Novel by Jhumpa Lahiri

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(Paperback)

Average Customer Rating: Customer Rating for this product is 4 out of 5 (72 ratings)

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  • Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Company
  • Pub. Date: September 2004
  • ISBN-13: 9780618485222
  • Sales Rank: 2,032
  • 304pp
 
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Synopsis

In her poignant and tightly woven first novel, Jhumpa Lahiri brilliantly expands on the themes she explored in her prize-winning debut collection: the immigrant experience, the clash of cultures, the conflicts of assimilation, and the relationships between generations.

Ashima and Ashoke Ganguli arrive in Cambridge, Massachusetts, at the end of the 1960s, shortly after their arranged marriage in Calcutta. An engineering student, Ashoke enters American culture with an open mind. His young bride is far less accepting. Isolated, pining for her family, she will never make peace with this new world. When their first child is born, his name is to be bestowed, according to custom, by the couple's elders. But word from India never arrives, and they must decide for themselves. On a train trip in India years earlier, Ashoke had stayed up past midnight to finish a book by his favorite Russian writer, Nikolai Gogol. Disastrously, the train derailed; Ashoke was one of the few survivors. His son will bear the name of the author who saved his life.

Yet Gogol Ganguli will grow to feel only resentment toward his name and all that it represents. He resists his parents' fealty to Indian customs and culture, struggling to define himself on his own terms. As a young man, he drifts into romances with women altogether unlike his sari-clad mother -- until he meets an Indian-American woman on a date arranged by their parents. That relationship will prove crucial, bringing Gogol back to his family and his heritage in entirely unexpected ways.

Acclaimed for her powers of insight and description, Lahiri zeroes in on the telling details that define character and place in a story that spans decades andcontinents. The Namesake is elegant, subtle, and very deeply affecting.

The New York Times

Jhumpa Lahiri's quietly dazzling new novel, The Namesake, is that rare thing: an intimate, closely observed family portrait that effortlessly and discreetly unfolds to disclose a capacious social vision. … In chronicling more than three decades in the Gangulis' lives, Ms. Lahiri has not only given us a wonderfully intimate and knowing family portrait, she has also taken the haunting chamber music of her first collection of stories and reorchestrated its themes of exile and identity to create a symphonic work, a debut novel that is as assured and eloquent as the work of a longtime master of the craft. — Michiku Kakutani

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Biography

One of the few first-time authors to win the Pulitzer Prize for fiction -- for her short-story collection, Interpreter of Maladies -- Jhumpa Lahiri has captivated fans and critics with her rich portrayals of Indian and Indian-American culture.

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Customer Reviews

Number of Reviews: 72
Average Rating: Customer Rating for this product is 4 out of 5
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Customer Rating for this product is 5 out of 5 Loved it!
The Beloved (aardra11@yahoo.com) , a dreamer..., 06/20/2008

Being indian...the theme of the novel was very well conveyed and the characters were beautifully described...not the happiest ending, however the meaning of this book and the title namesake was very apt with the plot.

Customer Rating for this product is 5 out of 5 Coming Of Age
Kiera, a high schol student, 06/06/2008

I had to read this book for IB English and I was surprise that I actually liked it.It really talks to a person awkwardness at youth and someone simply trying to find themselves. It's a relly interesting novel

Also recommended: Notes from the Underground, Siddhartha

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