Moor Last Sigh Salman Rushdie 9780099592419 Books
Download As PDF : Moor Last Sigh Salman Rushdie 9780099592419 Books
Moor Last Sigh Salman Rushdie 9780099592419 Books
“The Moor’s Last Sigh” tells the tale of three generations of an Indian family that built its fortune in the spice trade. This isn’t the type of book that would usually float to the top of my stack. I read it because I was traveling to Kochi (Cochin), and it came recommended because much of the first part of the book is set there. (The same recommendation might be received by someone traveling to Mumbai because the latter half of the book is set in that city; granted, there are a lot more stories set in Mumbai [Bombay] than Kochi.) Ultimately, I was pleasantly surprised by this book, despite its soap opera like tone.The book does read like a soap opera, at least until it gets into the narrating character’s story. There are strong women characters in this male-dominated environment of an Indian family business, though they tend to fall into the categories of “petty bitch” or “prima donna” or both. In the first generation there is a matriarchal character who dominates the family by manipulation and cruelty. In the second generation, the female lead—a strong-spirited, independent artist—falls in love with a Jewish employee of the family. Those familiar with marriage as practiced by the Indian elite will recognize how this inter-sect wedding with an underling might result in no small grief. The resulting marriage produces two female children and a boy. The latter would be nothing but a source of bliss, but for a birth defect that results in a malformed arm. While his mother smothers him with love and attempts to display a progressive spirit that’s beyond biases against such infirmities, under the surface there is the need to come to grips with the fact that handicapped children aren’t supposed to happen in high-caste families. The man with the infirmity is the narrator and overall protagonist of the book. He—as seems inevitable—will eventually fall for a woman of which his mother does not approve.
Beyond the soap opera pettiness, there are genuine intrigues that unfold in the latter half of the book. However, the pettiness of narcissistic people is the root of the protagonist’s ultimate trial.
While Rushdie builds characters in the manner we expect of literary fiction, he doesn’t abandon story. There is a narrative arc that unfolds over the course of the novel. Surprises are revealed and twists unfold.
This is the first Rushdie novel I’ve read. I’ve always intended to read “The Satanic Verses” to see what all the hullaballoo was about, and the readability of this work makes me even more interested in following through. You know a writer has to be good to inspire a country to take out a hit on him.
I’d recommend this for more than just people visiting Kochi or Mumbai—though it will be particularly interesting for those who are. If you’re interested in the lifestyles of the rich and famous in India more generally, you’ll find this work enlightening. In general, it will appeal to those who like their literary fiction with a bit of a storyline—and if you like the low drama of bitchiness, all the more so.
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Moor Last Sigh Salman Rushdie 9780099592419 Books Reviews
Didn't hold my attention
Countless times I attempted reading Salman Rushdie’s “The Moor’s Last Sigh.” Every borrowed library edition was returned unfinished after being distracted long enough to necessitate re-reading from the beginning and long enough to incur fines for lateness. After being assigned the controversial “Satanic Verses” for a college course on Post-colonial literature I had anticipated the satisfaction of reading other novels by Rushdie during semester break. It never happened, after a promising start with memorable sensual prose and witty word play my interest would wane every time Aurora Da Gama fell in love with Abraham Zogoiby and they consummated their desire on a shelf covered with bags of spices. Invariably there was a subtle shift in tone that caused me to drift from the book, disappointed with myself for abandoning it again. After a degree of success with finishing dense prose on kindle (I finally made it to the end of Jean Genet’s “Our Lady of the Flowers” because the weight of holding the book no longer distracted from the gravity of the words) so I invested in a digital copy of the novel.
It was a chore to finally finish the novel. Other reviews assert that the narrative trajectory of “the Moor’s Last Sigh” ceases once the protagonist is born, the anecdotes about his elders are well constructed and engaging. Feuding families and acerbic artists intersect in an alternative history of the sub-continent with enough magical realism and eccentricity to propel the story forward. Many memorable details, mentioned when I debate the merits of the novel by a friend who defends its brilliance, only happen within the initial third of the novel. The image of Aires removing his clothing while his new bride waits with nervous anticipation in bed for their nuptials, donning the wedding gown and veil to flee the bridal suite into the waiting boat of his male lover, is a stunning invention. However, nothing of equivalent resonance happens once “Moor” Moraes is born. The foreshadowing of his expulsion from the “Edenic” paradise of his mother’s salon of artists and intellectuals builds to a ridiculous justification for being disowned. His shrewdly calculating lover tape records their lovemaking sessions and encourages him to express maternal resentment mid-coitus. Cast out of his family she encourages a suicidal pact that backfires when she drinks the wrong poisoned potion and actually dies. Incarcerated and abandoned by his affluent family Moraes has no other recourse than to embrace the underbelly of Bombay. Admittedly the retelling of the tale inspires a sense of wonderment, but such an interesting plot was told in meandering tangents that derail the trajectory. By the time Moraes arrives at Benengeli and Vasco Miranda’s “mad fortress” I prayed for a swift conclusion, fully aware that the novel was ending where it began. Rushdie is a wildly inventive writer, but like his friend and colleague Angela Carter, the style initially sustains interest before wearying the reader with incessant smug cleverness and every ending is rushed at the moment when the author abandoned their own interest in the novel they were writing. At least Salman Rushdie had “The Satanic Verses” and Angela Carter’s ode to Shakespeare through an illegitimate twin vaudevillian dance act whose father was a respectable Shakespearean actor (“Wise Children”) ended her writing career on a high note (before her unfortunate passing).
I love Salman. <i> The Moor's Last Sigh </i> is a sweeping, time-tripping postcolonial epic about the dark and twisty history of the da Gama-Zogoiby clan that is Joycean in its scope, polysemous language play, and attention to detail. The future beckons, Nadia-Wadia, harken to its call!
Salman Rushdie does not need a positive review from another enthusiastic reader, but I want to go on record to say this is a remarkable book, weaving multiple stories in multiple cultures into a charming, moving, gripping (?) tapestry that is worth picking up and almost impossible to set aside.
I have slowly been working my way through Rushdie novels and the book provided an interesting, though rather strange story. The book had its challenging moments but I am happy enough to have read it. The characters were quite intereting though the main character was strangest of all. I wouldn't reread it but will keep working though his novels.
A typical Salman Rushdie constant change of time, dramatic personae and geographical location. One has to have a good memory
and a long time span in order to follow the various strands of the story. A most gorgeous narrative spanning time and space.
A wonderful, unique author who allows one to savor history, society and humanity in all its aspects.
I LOVED this book! Rushdie's writing is incredibly detailed, which made the novel a slower read, but the amount of time/effort it took to work through the novel did not make it any less enjoyable. The Moor's Last Sigh is beatifully written and full of the intricate history of a family through multiple generations. Not to mention the novel deals with the complex effects of the British on India through the effects on the characters.
“The Moor’s Last Sigh” tells the tale of three generations of an Indian family that built its fortune in the spice trade. This isn’t the type of book that would usually float to the top of my stack. I read it because I was traveling to Kochi (Cochin), and it came recommended because much of the first part of the book is set there. (The same recommendation might be received by someone traveling to Mumbai because the latter half of the book is set in that city; granted, there are a lot more stories set in Mumbai [Bombay] than Kochi.) Ultimately, I was pleasantly surprised by this book, despite its soap opera like tone.
The book does read like a soap opera, at least until it gets into the narrating character’s story. There are strong women characters in this male-dominated environment of an Indian family business, though they tend to fall into the categories of “petty bitch” or “prima donna” or both. In the first generation there is a matriarchal character who dominates the family by manipulation and cruelty. In the second generation, the female lead—a strong-spirited, independent artist—falls in love with a Jewish employee of the family. Those familiar with marriage as practiced by the Indian elite will recognize how this inter-sect wedding with an underling might result in no small grief. The resulting marriage produces two female children and a boy. The latter would be nothing but a source of bliss, but for a birth defect that results in a malformed arm. While his mother smothers him with love and attempts to display a progressive spirit that’s beyond biases against such infirmities, under the surface there is the need to come to grips with the fact that handicapped children aren’t supposed to happen in high-caste families. The man with the infirmity is the narrator and overall protagonist of the book. He—as seems inevitable—will eventually fall for a woman of which his mother does not approve.
Beyond the soap opera pettiness, there are genuine intrigues that unfold in the latter half of the book. However, the pettiness of narcissistic people is the root of the protagonist’s ultimate trial.
While Rushdie builds characters in the manner we expect of literary fiction, he doesn’t abandon story. There is a narrative arc that unfolds over the course of the novel. Surprises are revealed and twists unfold.
This is the first Rushdie novel I’ve read. I’ve always intended to read “The Satanic Verses” to see what all the hullaballoo was about, and the readability of this work makes me even more interested in following through. You know a writer has to be good to inspire a country to take out a hit on him.
I’d recommend this for more than just people visiting Kochi or Mumbai—though it will be particularly interesting for those who are. If you’re interested in the lifestyles of the rich and famous in India more generally, you’ll find this work enlightening. In general, it will appeal to those who like their literary fiction with a bit of a storyline—and if you like the low drama of bitchiness, all the more so.
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