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A Life Apart
 
 

A Life Apart [Kindle Edition]

Neel Mukherjee
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (17 customer reviews)

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Review

Sharp, disturbing and precisely written .--A.S. Byatt, TLS.
< br/> Mukherjee writes fearless prose, cut with wry humour and extraordinary compassion .--Rose Tremain, Sunday Telegraph.
< br/> The writing ... has a sculptured clarity. Assured and fearless. ... This is subtle, precise writing that penetrates character and motive with astringent humour. --The Times.
< br/> There are a lot of subtle cultural ironies in Neel Mukherjee s debut novel, which is what makes the book such a delight. ... A Life Apart is an elegant and accomplished debut, a novel of many shades. It blends the poignancy of a coming-of-age story with the rawer excitements of an urban thriller laced with sex and violence. --Sunday Telegraph.
< br/> Mukherjee deftly interweaves the worlds of the arms trade, sex workers, fruit pickers and the Daily Mail, while also casting a light on the economic policies of the Raj, communal violence and the fragility of relationships conducted under the glare of history. But he never loses sight of his characters and their emotional upheaval. The growing tension is expertly handled; the ending unsurprising yet completely devastating. --The Guardian.
< br/> Rich and nuanced ... Mukherjee is excellent on what motivates people to act the way they do. --The Daily Telegraph.
< br/> Impressive. ... Mukherjee writes wryly and wonderfully. ... Not since Alan Hollinghurst s The Swimming Pool Library have I been as engaged by an imagining of gay twilight. ... Deeply engaging and brilliantly observed. --The Independent.
< br/> Mukherjee summons place and character brilliantly and unflinchingly in pages redolent with detail. His metaphysical vision, of course, is just as acute. --TIME Magazine.
< br/> Ambitious and subtly written. --The Sunday Times.
< br/> Beautifully written and intelligently perceptive, A Life Apart is a novel about difference and expectation and the ironies that punctuate the middle ground between them. ... A wonderfully assured and fresh debut . --Literary Review.

The writing ... has a sculptured clarity. Assured and fearless. ... This is subtle, precise writing that penetrates character and motive with astringent humour. --Helen Dunmore, The Times

Mukherjee writes wryly and wonderfully ... Deeply engaging and brilliantly observed. --Mark Turner, Independent

Product Description

Ritwik Ghosh, twenty-two and recently orphaned, finds the chance to start a new life when he arrives in England from Calcutta. But to do so, he must not only relive his entire past but also try and understand it. Moreover, he must make sense of his relationship with his mother - scarred, abusive and all-consuming.But Oxford holds little of the salvation Ritwik is looking for. Instead he moves to London, where he drops out of official existence into a shadowy hinterland of illegal immigrants. However, the story that Ritwik writes to stave off his utter and complete loneliness - a Miss Gilby who teaches English, music and Western manners to the wife of educated zamindar - begins to find ghostly echoes in his life with his aged landlady, Anne Cameron.And then, one night, in the badlands of King's Cross, Ritwik runs into Zafar bin Hashm, suave, impossibly rich, unfathomable, possible arms dealer. What does the drive to redemption hold for lost Ritwik?Set in 1970s and 80s India, 90s England and in the first decade of twentieth-century Bengal, A Life Apart is a scalding novel about dislocations and alienations, about the tenuous and unconscious intersections of lives and histories and about the consolations of storytelling. Above all, it is about the impossibilities of love.

Product details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 558 KB
  • Print Length: 357 pages
  • Page Numbers Source ISBN: 184901101X
  • Publisher: Corsair (28 Jan 2010)
  • Sold by: Amazon Media EU S.à r.l.
  • Language English
  • ASIN: B0038M3SSI
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (17 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #16,459 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful
By Ralph Blumenau TOP 500 REVIEWER
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Verified Purchase
The book appears to be two stories, told in alternate chapters and set in different type.

One is the story of Ritwik Ghosh, a young man born in Calcutta around 1970. It begins with his childhood in an extended family. (No need to remember the many names and relationships - they soon disappear.) Ritwik's mother is an unbelievable sadistic disciplinarian; but both his parents die when he is 21. At the age of 23, he wins a scholarship to Oxford, and determines never to return to India. He regularly cottages in the public lavatories in Oxford; the descriptions of this activity are graphic and prolonged. When his student visa runs out, he stays in England illegally. He becomes the lodger and carer of an 86 year-old widow, Anne Cameron, who had once lived in India but was now living in Brixton. The descriptions of this lady - her mind often wandering, but at other times suddenly very lucid - are superb, as is the tender way in which Ritwick looks after her. But at times he also earns some money by doing back-breaking work during the day on fruit farms, exploited alongside other illegal immigrants, while on some evenings he rents himself out by cruising, dangerously, in the King's Cross area.

The other story is set in Bengal, mainly during the turbulent period between 1903 and 1905 when the British Raj was dividing the country between Western (mainly Hindu) and Eastern (mainly Muslim) Bengal, to the fury of the Hindus. The central character here is Maud Gilby, who is employed as "governess" (tutor) and companion to the wife of a Hindu landowner presiding over a largely Muslim village.

We are well into the second half of the book, on page 201, before we get a hint of what the link between these two stories might be - but that first suggestion is misleading; only later we gather from a couple of throwaway lines what the real link is. But at least I found here a possible explanation why the style of the second story is at times rather stodgy and lacks the brilliance of the first story.

There are occasional touches of surrealism in the novel - such as the appearance of brilliant oriental birds perched on a tree in a Brixton garden.

Mukherjee packs a lot of different stories into this his first novel, and though each of them is interesting in itself, I think they do not properly cohere. Many critics obviously think otherwise: the book was the winner of India's premier literary prize in 2009.
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23 of 25 people found the following review helpful
Debut of the Year 11 Feb 2010
Format:Hardcover
Sensual, beautiful, and gut-wrenchingly sad, this is the story of Ritwik, a boy who moves from the slums of Calcutta to Oxford on scholarship. In his attempts to stay in the country after graduation, he falls down a rabbit hole into a world of danger and exploitation: picking strawberries in the fields of Kent and hustling at King's Cross, all the while serving as a live-in nurse for a demented woman in her nineties, Anne Cameron. Ritwik's relationship with Anne gives rise to some of the most tender and genuinely moving scenes I've read in recent years. Interspersed with Ritwik's story are sections of the novel he's writing about an English governess in India in at the turn of the century. This "book-within-a-book ," fascinating in its own right, contrasts with and illuminates the main story.

I read A LIFE APART a while ago, after it won India's Vodafone Crossword Award, but I still get a chill when I think back on it.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
Unusual 20 Feb 2011
By Pen pal VINE™ VOICE
Format:Paperback
This was an unusual read. There is the central character of Ritwik and he is writing a book which we also read, about life in India at the turn of the century. Miss Gilby is the central character of his book and a rather eccentric lady of the times, pushing against convention, and so too is Ritwik. He is a deeply sensitive young man, who carries the scars of a very difficult childhood and who finally escapes to England on a scholarship. At this point you really want him to turn everything around, but he never can escape an emptiness deep inside him which is deeply destructive. He is a walking contradiction. Totally caring of Anne Cameron, the elderly lady he ends up living in the house of, and yet totally reckless for his own welfare. The whole book seems to be about division. Division in India at the beginning of the last century, division between Ritwik from where he wants to be and where he is, wanting desperately to fit in, and yet living a life apart. Division in his regard for others, and regard for himself. He is noble, and yet he moves in a world that is far from any cultural aspirations. He walks a line of potential, yet is drawn to the seedy sides of life, where desperation and hopelessness thrive and exploitation is the only name of the game. I would have liked to give it 3 and a half stars. It was more than ok, but I don't know if I could really say I liked it.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Good
It's sad and at times mesmerising. Very realistic, in terms of portraying a life of an illegal immigrant in a foreign country. Read more
Published 3 months ago by alicante123
hard work that does not reward the effort
I bought this book as I am enjoying reading books at present about cultures mixing and crossing paths, it tells the early story of Ritwick in India & then his arrival in England... Read more
Published 4 months ago by azza
Good
Good, timely and good more.

The book is a brilliant read into the complex worlds of identity and the generational influence of colonialism.
Published 5 months ago by MR M
Two books in one!
What a fascinating, interesting and unusual debut novel about a young, gay Indian man, Ritwik, who arrives in England on a student's visa and tries to fit in with student life. Read more
Published 5 months ago by Leicsliz
Worth a read
I enjoyed this book and I rarely ever read books with too many unpronouncable names. The main story of the principal character was in itself interesting - a gay Indian coming to... Read more
Published 10 months ago by SergiusT
Two good books!
When a gay, Indian student decides to stay on in London after his university education, he finds himself deep in the shadowy world of the black economy. Read more
Published 17 months ago by Ripple
Compelling
Neel Mukherjee's A Life Apart is so assured and strong that it's difficult to believe that it's his debut novel.

This isn't the only surprise about it. Read more
Published 18 months ago by Leyla Sanai
Beautifully written passages, but combined too many different elements...
I have a soft spot for Indian literature and so when I saw the phrase eWinner of Indiafs Premier Literary Prize, The Vodafone Crossword Award 2009 on the back of this book I picked... Read more
Published 21 months ago by Jackie
A roller coaster of a read
Reading these reviews about Mukherjee's A Life Apart I surmise that some of the reviewers know the author. Read more
Published 23 months ago by Kiwifunlad
Moving, shocking and graphic
This book won a prestigious Indian literary prize although under another title. (Past Continuous) Why on earth do publishers do this? Read more
Published on 1 May 2010 by rollerskate
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