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A Golden Age [Audiobook] [Audio Cassette]

Tahmima Anam , Tania Rodrigues
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (15 customer reviews)
Price: £39.50 & this item Delivered FREE in the UK with Super Saver Delivery. See details and conditions
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Product details

  • Audio Cassette
  • Publisher: ISIS Publishing (1 Aug 2007)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0753138018
  • ISBN-13: 978-0753138014
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (15 customer reviews)

More About the Author

Tahmima Anam
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Product Description

Review

'Anam achieves a delicacy and tenderness in conjuring the "threads of feeling" between people, a poetic precision of images: kites floating, huts sinking into the sea, "hungry, cracked earth". From the wreckage and destruction grows a voice of real eloquence'

(Anita Sethi, Independent 20060201)

'Anam has created for Bangladesh what Romesh Gunesekera managed for Sri Lanka: a ballad for perserverance . . . A Golden Age pays tribute, with sensitivity and restrained passion, to those who fought for one such arbour: a country to call home'

(Christian House, Independent on Sunday 20060201)

'Anam has her own distinctive voice . . . the authenticity shines through Anam’s beautiful, simple prose'

(Martha Kearney, Harper’s Bazaar )

'A stunning novel lays bare a mother's ordeal in the gulf between the two Pakistans'

(Observer )

'A Golden Age compellingly twists the personal and the historical, humming with handed down wisdom'

(Richard Godwin, Literary Review )

‘Vivid . . . momentous change and heartbreaking dilemmas’

(Publishing News )

'I’d put a few bob on Tahmima Anam – the extract from her novel-in-progress . . . is a vivid and intriguing slice of Bangladesh in 1959' (Written following the publication of Bedford Square, an anthology of new writing from Poet Laureate Andrew Motion's Creative Writing Programme at Royal Holloway, which included an extract from A Golden Age

(The Times )

'A Bengali Suite Francaise' (Jonathan Freedland, Newsnight Review )

'A steely tale of how one family deals with political unrest … Moving and beautifully written'

(Woman )

'Anam writes with a poetic lyricism that is both seductively romantic and explores troubling themes and violent truths with searing verisimilitude. An outstanding debut that glows with the golden hue of the title'

(Easy Living )

'The book touches on love, devotion and hope'

(Hephizibah Anderson, Vogue )

'A moving novel of deceptive simplicity and strength'

(Waterstone's Books Quarterly )

'Anam deftly balances the story of a nation against that of a family'

(Kamila Shamsie, Guardian )

'A Golden Age is an ambitious and powerful debut'

(Natasha Tripney, New Statesman )

'Anam’s novel flows easily, packing in a wealth of history as well as attention to detail that effortlessly make the image come alive . . . An assured, moving read'

(Sarah Birke, The Times )

'A real page-tuner, with a bravura, heart stopping ending'

 

(Sunday Telegraph/ Seven )

'This book is by turn moving, sad, but always absorbing'

(Good Book Guide )

'With A Golden Age, Anam is reminding Bangladeshis born, like her, after the war just what independence was all about and what the hopes and aspirations of their parents were before corruption ate them away'

(Tim Cribb, South China Morning Post )

'Anam has done a service to her country . . . No other writer has treated the subject with such clarity before, in English'

(TLS )

'I had tears in my eyes'

(Woman's Own ) --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Anita Sethi, Independent

'Anam achieves a delicacy and tenderness in conjuring the "threads
of feeling" between people, a poetic precision of images: kites floating,
huts sinking into the sea, "hungry, cracked earth". From the wreckage and
destruction grows a voice of real eloquence'
--This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
22 of 22 people found the following review helpful
A brilliant debut 14 Mar 2008
By Wynne Kelly TOP 1000 REVIEWER VINE™ VOICE
Format:Hardcover
A Golden Age is a beautifully written book. The writing is simple and straightforward and creates a vivid picture of life in Bangladesh. It is the story of Rehana, a widow, and how she seeks to protect her children during the Bangladeshi War of Independence in 1971. Her student children want to become active in the war and Rehana reluctantly adds her support. But soon she is pulled more and more into supporting her adopted land of Bangladesh. The war is brutal and is graphically described and the narrative is gripping. The relationships between Rehana and her children, the Major and her neighbours are all very well drawn and perceptive.

Rehana is forced to make some hard choices - but having once lost her children in a custody battle she is determined to do anything within her capability to keep her son and daughter safe.

In the west the Pakistan-Bangladesh conflict is hardly remembered so this novel is a timely reminder of the recent history of the region. A brilliant debut - I do hope she has some more books in the pipeline!
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful
By A. Ross TOP 500 REVIEWER
Format:Hardcover
Like most Americans, my knowledge of Bangladesh has largely been limited to tragic news reports of devastating flooding every few years. However, unlike most Americans, I do at least know that Bangladesh was formerly part of present-day Pakistan, and fought a war for independence in 1971. That war is both the main catalyst in this debut novel, and the backdrop for the drama that Anam presents.

The story revolves around Rehana, a widow in her late 30s, whose main concern in life is her two teenage children, Maya and Soheil. In a prologue (the book opens with the stunning line "Dear Husband, today I lost our children."), we learn how Rehana's children were legally awarded to her brother-in-law following the death of their father, and of her struggle to regain custody. Although the separation only lasted a year and a half, it left a deep scar of guilt and remorse in Rehana that never healed. Every year she holds a party to celebrate their return, and it is at the 1971 edition of that party that we meet her children, neighbors, and friends for the first time. This party establishes the domestic tranquility that will soon be shattered by the coming war.

Rehana is apolitical herself, but soon finds herself dragged into the struggle for independence via the strong political views of her university-going children. What starts as something she can largely ignore becomes less so as atrocities on the part of the Pakistani army become more than just abstract bad news, and start to affect her friends and family. This is the kind of material that could easily become a weighty saga, or melodramatic soap opera, but Anam deftly avoids the pitfalls of both. As the civil war grows more intense, and her children become more involved and are more at danger, Rehana maintains a quiet determination to support them and do what she can for them. This theme of a mother's love is central to the story, and is carried out with pitch-perfect restraint. In fact, I suspect that it is a book that will be much more emotionally engaging for parents than non-parents. (I've definitely noticed that I respond to certain plots and themes much differently as a parent than I did prior to having a child -- and this is exactly the kind of story I don't think I would have connected with prior to having a child.)

The story unfolds in episodes over the course of nine months, with some leaps in time along the way. This is a nice technique that avoids the need to detail every single day along the way, and allows Anam to concentrate on what is meaningful. There are a number of compelling subplots, such as Soheil's love for a neighbor's daughter, Rehana's harboring and tending to a wounded rebel leader, and the children's blossoming into adults. In every case, she writes with compassion and heart for her characters without being cloying or sappy.

It's not a perfect book -- there are a few minor flaws, the foremost of which is a lack of glossary to the 50+ Urdu or Bengali terms used in the book. This isn't critical, but it is annoying. Another is the relative lack of sense of place throughout the book. The author could do a little more to create a truly vivid picture of Dhaka, as well as the Rehana's house -- neither really comes alive on the page. But these are relatively minor quibbles with a work as masterful and engaging as this. It's the first in a projected trilogy, and I can't wait for the next!
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
slow burner 29 May 2011
By Debs VINE™ VOICE
Format:Paperback
It took me a while to get in to this story and I must confess there were times when I considered giving up on it. Usually if a book has not gripped me by page 50, I set it aside. I had read beyond page 50 in this one and was still not gripped so according to my usual system, I should have given up on it; however, there was something about it that made me want to continue...and I am so glad I did.

The more I read, the more I wanted to read. This book is interesting on different levels. Firstly, there are the characters, richly developed and emotionally realistic. No-one is perfect in this book, and for this reason, the reader is more inclined to relate to them. Then there is the detail - Bangladesh culture is brought vividly to life with descriptions of the foods, clothing, transport, weather, etc. Details that might seem trivial, like how an unexpected downpour drenches the female protagonist and makes her sari cling to her in an embarrassing manner, are not gratuitous but rather help us to understand what her life was life a little more clearly. And then there is the history - Bangladesh's struggle for independence from Pakistan is the backdrop of this novel. It does not dominate the novel and at no point does the book feel like a political tome, but it is certainly there, affecting the characters' lives and influencing their choices. The characters have to make decisions and take actions that most readers will never face and this gives the story a powerful element, making the reader wonder what they would do if they were in the same situation.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Captivating.
I fell in love with this book and it's central character, Rehana: a woman who at the beginning loses her children to her brother-in-law & his barren wife after the death of her... Read more
Published 1 month ago by Gruffalo Girl
Excellent
A good read. Takes you to the time and the place on a really personal level.
Be warned you can't put it down once you start.
Published 7 months ago by Hathaway
Evocative
A Golden Age is set around the Independance War of 1971. I'm Bengali and wasn't born then, but have heard stories all my life of the fear and troubles of the time. Read more
Published 11 months ago by Friend Jahan
A gripping, enlightening first novel
Set against the backdrop of the final stages of Bangladesh's war of independence, `A Golden Age' is a gripping novel. Read more
Published 20 months ago by Paola Hanna
Beautifully written and informative, but a bit implausible
I bought this book to prepare for a specific workshop about it. I thought it was well written and I learned a great deal. Read more
Published on 10 April 2010 by JDM
Can this be real?
I would agree to most of the other reviewers about the prose. This is a simply written but captivating read. Read more
Published on 2 Mar 2009 by Makoto Honjo
Bangladesh 1971
This was an excellent read, covering the human element of Bangladesh's fight for independance in 1971. Read more
Published on 27 Sep 2008 by DubaiReader
Fascinating book, beautifully written
Set in the beginnings of Bangladesh's struggle for independence from Pakistan, Anam's debut novel follows events through the eyes of Rehana Haque, a widow whose every move revolves... Read more
Published on 14 Aug 2008 by Sofia
A True Gem
This beautifully written book captures so much of the time and events. The characters strong and deep, it tells so much of the rich culture of the countries involved. Read more
Published on 26 July 2007 by Dr. Babus Ahmed
a book that talks straight to the reader's heart
i just finished reading tahmima anam's "a golden age", a remarkable

first novel about a family's struggle in the background of the 1971

war. Read more
Published on 22 April 2007 by Ms. Shahpar Selim
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