Mention Books Conducive To What the Body Remembers
Original Title: | What the Body Remembers |
ISBN: | 0385496052 (ISBN13: 9780385496056) |
Edition Language: | English |
Setting: | India,1947 |
Literary Awards: | Orange Prize Nominee for Fiction Longlist (2000), Commonwealth Writers' Prize for Best Book in Caribbean and Canada (2000) |
Shauna Singh Baldwin
Paperback | Pages: 471 pages Rating: 3.9 | 2566 Users | 184 Reviews
Description Concering Books What the Body Remembers
Out of the rich culture of India and the brutal drama of the 1947 Partition comes this lush and eloquent debut novel about two women married to the same man. Roop is a young girl whose mother has died and whose father is deep in debt. So she is elated to learn she is to become the second wife of a wealthy Sikh landowner in a union beneficial to both. For Sardaji’s first wife, Satya, has failed to bear him children. Roop believes that she and Satya, still very much in residence, will be friends. But the relationship between the older and younger woman is far more complex. And, as India lurches toward independence, Sardarji struggles to find his place amidst the drastic changes. Meticulously researched and beautifully written, What the Body Remembers is at once poetic, political, feminist, and sensual.
Be Specific About About Books What the Body Remembers
Title | : | What the Body Remembers |
Author | : | Shauna Singh Baldwin |
Book Format | : | Paperback |
Book Edition | : | Deluxe Edition |
Pages | : | Pages: 471 pages |
Published | : | January 16th 2001 by Anchor (first published 1999) |
Categories | : | Cultural. India. Fiction. Historical. Historical Fiction. Canada. Asia |
Rating About Books What the Body Remembers
Ratings: 3.9 From 2566 Users | 184 ReviewsWeigh Up About Books What the Body Remembers
What the Body Remembers by Shauna Singh Baldwin is one of my favorite books of all time! I wish I had read this book sooner. It took me almost eight weeks to finish the book; I read in intervals because I had to take detours to complete other reading commitments. The book centers around three main characters: Roop, who at the age of sixteen, becomes a second wife to a rich landowner; Satya the landowner's first wife who is childless and struggles to maintain her status when a new woman comesA lyrical and lengthy reflection on India in the time of the Partition, told through the eyes of people who had almost no influence on India's history during that time -- Sikhs and women. Sardarji is a wealthy Sikh landowner in Punjab. He is UK-educated as an engineer and rescues his family estates from bankrupcy and inefficiency. His first wife is Satya, an articulate and confident woman with a sharp mind and a sharp tongue. Satya is well-suited to Sardarji, they love and respect each other,
If the circle that is your body falls on a ladder inscribed on the game board of time, you climb.If it lands on a snake,you slip-slide back.Resume your journey again.And if you do not learn what you were meant to learn from your past lives,you are condemned to repeat them.This is Karma.This is what got me hooked!I loved this book...you travel with Roop as if your really their and at times I swear I could taste and smell what I was reading,and would have to come to relisation I was at home

Wow! This may be the best Indian historical novel I've read to date. For about a week and a half, I was utterly swept up in the world of Roop and Satya, the two wives of Sardarji Singh, a wealthy Sikh landowner who also works as an engineer for the British Indian government in 1940s Punjab. Through the lives of these women, the story of the desperate struggle of Sikhs to remain in their homeland of Punjab, is beautifully illustrated. They face sexism from their fathers and husbands, always
The story of Sardarji, an English-educated Sikh engineer in India during the last days of British rule, but more centrally of his two wives. Satya is Sardaji's contemporary, strong-willed and well-suited to him, but unable to have children. Roop, his much younger second wife, is an independent child, when we first meet her, but soon gives way to societal expectations that she be "good-good, sweet-sweet." The tensions between the three, and the restricted roles placed on Satya and Roop, are at
I expected to finish Wolf Totem this month, but my boss unexpectedly recommended this book. I'm glad I followed her suggestion. The book tells a story which resonates deeply with my own views; being a middle-ground-sort of person in a world that forces people to take sides is tough, especially if you were a woman, and were not afraid to speak out.Ms. Baldwin's writing is beautiful; sometimes I paused and re-read a paragraph or a sentence just to admire how she describes things and tells her
5***** and a ❤This is an extraordinary book. The novel deals with the struggles to form Pakistan, when Muslims fought Sikhs and Hindus, and with the traditional culture vs the modern expectations. It is also a tale of woman and her place in the world. Roop is just 16 when she becomes the second wife of Sandaji (needed because 1st wife Satya is still barren after 20 years). How Roop grows and matures, how Satya descends to madness with jealousy and hatred are themes that mirror the division of
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