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Brick Lane
 
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Brick Lane [Audio Download]

by Monica Ali (Author), Ayesha Dharker (Narrator)
3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (130 customer reviews)
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Product details

  • Audio Download
  • Listening Length: 6 hours and 8 minutes
  • Program Type: Audiobook
  • Version: Abridged
  • Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers Limited
  • Audible Release Date: 16 Jun 2005
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B002SQAUTA
  • Average Customer Review: 3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (130 customer reviews)
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Product Description

A Richard and Judy Book Club Selection.

Nazneen's inauspicious entry to the world, an apparent stillbirth on the hard mud floor of a Bangladeshi village hut, imbues in her a sense of fatalism that she carries across continents when she is married off to Chanu. Her life in London's Tower Hamlets is, on the surface, calm. For years, keeping house and rearing children, she does what is expected of her. Yet Nazneen walks a tightrope stretched between her daughters' embarrassment and her husband's resentments. Chanu calls his elder daughter the little memsahib. "I didn't ask to be born here," says Shahana, with regular finality.

Into that fragile peace walks Karim. He sets questions before her, of longing and belonging; he sparks in her a turmoil that reflects the community's own; he opens her eyes and directs her gaze, but what she sees, in the end, comes as a suprise to them both.

While Nazneen journeys along her path of self-realization, a way haunted by her mother's ghost, her sister Hasina, back in Bangladesh, rushes headlong at her life, first making a "love marriage", then fleeing her violent husband. Woven through the novel, Hasina's letters from Dhaka recount a world of overwhelming adversity. Shaped, yet ultimately not bound, by their landscapes and memories, both sisters struggle to dream themselves out of the rules prescribed for them.

Beautifully rendered and, by turns, both comic and deeply moving, Brick Lane establishes Monica Ali as one of the most exciting new voices in fiction.

©2003 Monica Ali; (P)2003 HarperCollins UK

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
61 of 68 people found the following review helpful
Hard work 7 July 2004
Format:Paperback
Ever since its original publication and almost instantaneous shortlisting for various awards, Brick Lane has been on my "to get round to reading" list. From the rave reviews across the cover from all the papers, I thought it would be a sure-fire hit with me too. However, this wasn't the case.

Nazneen's story, at first glance, is highly intriguing - a Bangladeshi woman in an arranged marriage, shipped off to a husband she's never met in London. Initially this remains interesting, but that soon fades as the story unfolds painfully slowly, with little sense of direction. Like so many Booker nominees, Ali takes 5 pages to say something that could be conveyed in a single sentence. She seems incapable of writing directly, always using complicated symbols that the reader has to untangle, or otherwise be left with a text that always seems to be hinting at something just out of shot. Consequently the text often feels like nothing is happening at all, unless you try to read into every single word Ali writes: professional critics may love subtexts, but I certainly do not if it's the *only* interesting layer in the novel. Essentially, everything takes far too long to happen, and the novel feels suffocating as a result. Of course, this may be Ali's intention, to illustrate how Nazneen feels in her arranged life over which she has no control, but this doesn't make reading Brick Lane any easier.

Despite this, Ali has a gift for potraying strong characters who you feel could really exist. A great deal of empathy is felt for Nazneen, and her sister Hasina, whose tragic life in Bangladesh illustrates another path Nazneen might have taken if she had tried to buck the repressive system. Hasina is perhaps my favourite character in the book: she refuses to let life cow her, even through extreme poverty and prostitution. It's a little irritating that her poignant letters to Nazneen, through which we discover her story, are the weakest part of the text. They're supposed to read like the words of someone partially literate, but as another reviewer noted, mixing poor syntax with beautiful and insightful imagery just doesn't work. It sounds forced and reminds us it's Monica Ali writing and not Hasina, making the whole text feel a little contrived and artificial.

Brick Lane suffers most of all from being an obvious first novel, however much the critics are already calling Monica Ali a natural super-author. I'm not saying she can't write - not at all, she can write prose with the best of them - but she hasn't yet learned how to keep her writing down to the bare essentials. Far too much of the story is superfluous - the book is just too long, for no justifiable reason. It seems that Ali had so many ideas she wanted to put into her book that she was prepared to twist the plot this way and that to fit in everything that she wanted to say. The story suffers as a result, repeatedly losing momentum (and thus my interest) thanks to incidental scenes which serve only to make another point about the difficulties faced by a Bangladeshi woman in an arranged marriage abroad. It often feels like the story has been put on hold for the sake of another bullet-point on a big list of "issues" Ali had next to her keyboard.

So, that probably sounds all very negative - but that's unfair because this is still a good book. It is often insightful and enlightening, and occasionally it is wise and very enjoyable. However, it is not the masterpiece so many critics seem determined to make it out to be. I just want to add a little balance to their hyperbole: for the average reader like me who doesn't love books just because they use heaps of symbolism and metaphor, or are clever just for the sake of being clever (think: Martin Amis), Brick Lane is more heavy going than it should be. It is still a rewarding read, but definitely not an easy one.

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11 of 12 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
I managed to finish this book even if with great difficulty. Great book if you have difficulty falling asleep as it so tedious it helps one to slumber.
Starts well but then the first 100 pages become tedious then once I thought it had got interesting it "slowed" down once more and got even more tedious only to "pick up" once more in the last 50 pages or so.
I basically agree with what other reviewers who have given one or two stars have written.
I found the characters flat and did not care for most of them ( Razia is the only one that I could care for).
I am still at a loss why the sister Hasina wrote letters in broken English, sometimes to the point of utter nonsense...was it to show that she was illiterate? Even then she would have written in her native tongue - Bangladeshi and even if her written standards were very low she would have written as she spoke...there would be spelling mistakes and mistakes in using the subjunctive, etc but I have difficulty in believing they would be as they were written by MA
Nazneen is irritating, she prays, she acts the servant to her husband, she lives and stays in the community but then has the guts to have an affair with a younger man. (Was this to show rebellion to her status?) and how come despite everybody being a gossip and knowing what was happening in the community her husband Chanu never knew about her going to the Bengal Tigers meetings herself?
The book has been over-hyped. There definitely is more interesting literature out there in general. There are also books, both autobiographies and fiction, that deal with the culture clash and immigrants in GB and make a much more interesting read.
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18 of 20 people found the following review helpful
By ghandibob VINE™ VOICE
Format:Hardcover
There is a moment in Brick Lane when Nanzeen reads one of her sister's letters, sent to her in Britain from back in Bangladesh. Nanzeen, and by extension the reader of Brick Lane, is suddenly, and violently, taken to another world. Hasina, the beautiful younger sister who ran off to make a love match rather than allow herself to be part of an arranged marriage as Nanzeen did, recounts how her friend is in hospital because her husband pored acid over her face as a punishment. She will not live long. It is horrific and startling, and comes more as a shock because so much of Nanzeen's life is relatively sheltered. She is a Muslim woman who rarely leaves the house, much less the estate in Tower Hamlets on which she, her husband Chanu and her two daughters Shahana and Bibi live.

It would be a mistake to confuse the fact that Nanzeen is sheltered, however, with the idea that this novel is confined. It is a much more wide-ranging book that that. Politics, religion, love and, most important of all, intricate family dynamics are the driving forces behind this excellent debut from Ali. There is a lack of showiness that is admirable. She does not want to impress you with tricks and magic - the false truths of the conjurer. Instead, what Ali does is place, layer by layer, a subtle narrative worked around the figure of Nanzeen. The book, like the seam work Nanzeen eventually manages to find, allows the ordinary to invest life with something more than the sum of its parts.

This is not a perfect book by any means, though in most part it is very well told. The letters from Hasina that allow a window into the life Nanzeen may well have led had she stayed at home, and punctuate the story taking place near Brick Lane, can be distracting and perhaps do not quite work. And it also seems sometimes as if Chanu is too much of a cliché, a laughable misogynist, convinced he is better than he is and constantly let down by a world that takes him for a fool.

But Ali rescues this situation, this potential slide into adequacy. When talking to Dr Azad, Chanu's unlikely and seemingly antagonistic friend, near the end of the book, Ali shows us something in the relationship of the doctor and Nanzeen's husband that Nanzeen herself never saw. And without wishing to give away the end, there is much in Chanu's character that you do not see through Nanzeen's eyes. Ali avoids triteness by being true to the reality of her protagonist. Nanzeen has a sheltered life forced upon her - a Muslim attitude that Ali calls quietly into question throughout the novel - but as we see this painted as an unworkable structure in modern Britain, we also see that our heroine, not speaking English and not allowed out on her own, misses out on a great deal. It is only as she strikes out into her new world, decades after arriving there, that she begins to see just how little she really knows.

It seems that modern British fiction often ignores what is happening right now, in a way that it never did before. More than anything, Brick Lane addresses just how life has been for ordinary Muslims living in London in the last few years - without histrionics, without flashes of unlikely hyperbole, but with warmth and style and grace. Brick Lane doesn't teem with life and history like, to pick a perhaps unfair example, Rushdie's Midnight's Children, but it does work very well as an example of a young writer who has captured human truths that most everyone who ever tried to write a book would kill for.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Not for everyone
I absolutely loved this book. The observation was so detailed. Couldn't put it down. It may not be to everyones taste but I have since purchased two more of Monica Ali's books... Read more
Published 13 days ago by Mrs. D. J. Blake
Others have done it better
I found this a disappointing read. The theme appealed to me, but it was deadly boring, I'm afraid. I struggled to get through the book. Read more
Published 4 months ago by Thomas Hardy fan
Brick Lane
Brick Lane by Monica Ali tells the story of Nazneen, a Bangladeshi girl who is brought to England as a child-bride to an older man, Chanu. Read more
Published 4 months ago by Carroty Nell
Some very real characters
This is one of those books which you look forward to reading and don't want to put down. Nazneen and her husband struggle to find their place in London after moving from... Read more
Published 4 months ago by Four Violets
Got Halfway Through Before Throwing in the Towel
How this novel got short-listed for the 2003 Brooker Prize I will never understand. I found it very dull, very slow and very repetitive. Read more
Published 5 months ago by Monday!
Some good features but would have benefited from a tough editor
This is a novel about two Bangladeshi sisters, Hasina and Nazneen, whose life paths have diverged: Nazneen has moved to England within an arranged marriage to Chanu, whilst Hasina... Read more
Published 7 months ago by James
Too easy to put down
I have to agree with a lot of previous reviewers - not bad, but nowhere nearly as exciting as the hoohah would suggest. Read more
Published 15 months ago by DB
A masterpiece of characterization
While I understand, and to some extent agree, with those reviewers who say that this book fails to live up to all the hype that has been written about it (and plastered all over... Read more
Published 16 months ago by Phil O'Sofa
Cliched, stereotypical, tedious and pointless
I used to pick this book up in the bookshop near work a few years ago, and each time, I put it back down again. Read more
Published 16 months ago by Cathy White
Brick Lane: an enlightening debut
In the novel, Monica Ali tells the story of Nazneen, a Bangladeshi woman who moves to London as a result of her arranged marriage to a man twenty years older than she is. Read more
Published 18 months ago by Paola Hanna
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