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At the Water's Edge
 
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At the Water's Edge [Paperback]

Pradeep Jeganathan

Price: £6.95 & this item Delivered FREE in the UK with Super Saver Delivery. See details and conditions
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Pradeep Jeganathan
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Product Description

Product Description

Assured and accomplished, Pradeep Jeganathan's long awaited debut collection of short fiction is a spare, controlled meditation on the details of inhabitation: power and inequality, friendship and enmity, love and loss, violence and its memories. The seven interconnected stories span a near thirty years of his county's recent past; each traces a delicately textured frame of troubling, telling beauty, weaving together, with almost incredible economy, not the often composed image of Sri Lanka - a paradise isle where 'only man is vile' - but a life world, live and remembered, to be lived in again.

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Amazon.com:  4 reviews
22 of 22 people found the following review helpful
An Impressive Debut! 14 May 2004
By Ritty A. Lukose - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
This collection of loosely interlinked short stories delicately and movingly explores large themes (violence, gender, class, nationalism, transnationalism, politics, ethnicity) in contemporary Sri Lanka through the microscopic lens of the ordinary and the everyday. The landscape of these stories is fraught with subtle and not-so-subtle tension, foreboding, sadness, loss, anger, violence and fatigue. Each story delicately winds itself around an event or events in everyday life - a fight in a classroom among boys, the desire of a servant girl for trousers, the struggle of a poor working class woman to care for her young daughters, the estrangements of going to college in the US, a train ride, the slippery slope of conversation between friends --- each shot through with the fissures of gender, class, nation, transnation, and ethnicity that underscores the social and political terrain of contemporary Sri Lanka. The language is beautiful, spare, and simple. The deceptive simplicity of these stories and the connections and disconnections between them creates a multifaceted, complex, and deeply felt exploration of the situatedness of our everyday lives along the faultlines that mark the contemporary world. This is an impressive debut collection.
16 of 16 people found the following review helpful
Amazing debut! 28 April 2004
By Nivedita Menon - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
I ended up swallowing At the Water's Edge in one entranced gulp. It's about Sri Lanka, and it's about being an alienated intellectual under conditions of late capitalism, and it's about the human predicament. Jeganathan has a deceptively unaffected style, the pitch is fine-tuned, and the story I liked best, The Train From Batticoloa, manages to convey utter menace and despair without anything "really" happening - I could hardly bear to read on. This is a book with an inner novel struggling to break free...
10 of 10 people found the following review helpful
moving and memorable! 19 April 2004
By Sula Niksung - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
This is almost a poem, not a detail or word is wasted. A work that invokes a depth of feeling in me; the beauty of his language is juxtaposed to the grotesqueness of his world, making us appreciate the courage of an author who can show us with such exactness, what that world might be like.

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