Pages: 512 (Paperback) ISBN: 0349117985 Pub: Abacus Pub date: 2006-07-06 Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 11684
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Reader Reviews:Extra-ordinary (0/0 people found this helpful)This book shows how extraordinary two 'ordinary' people can be. Even if it doesn't set out to, it highlights the vacuousness of being famous just for being famous. These two lives were the opposite: not famous, but fascinating, real and well lived. They have so much to tell about being human, India, World War Two, suburban Britain, suffering, hope, love and the interdependence of situations, times and places. How many people, like Shanti and Henny, have life stories just waiting to be told, but they don't tell because it's just their life; it's their business. Who would be interested, perhaps they think...
I enjoyed this more than A Suitable Boy! (1/2 people found this helpful)And I very much enjoyed A Suitable Boy!
Enduring Love (4/4 people found this helpful)A very moving memoir about the author's great-uncle Shanti and great-aunt Henny. He became very close to them after they welcomed him into their home, when as a seventeen year old he arrived in England to complete his education.
Elegy for a tormented century (2/2 people found this helpful)A one-armed dentist and his company secretary wife who quarrel noisily in German without embarrassment in front of uncomprehending English-speaking guests - they do not seem an absorbing subject for a 500-page book, but Vikram Seth takes us under the seemingly ordinary surface to explore the mystery of enduring love and of what it is to be human. Told in beautiful prose, with a poet's eye for telling detail and with deep psychological insight, this double biography is at the same time an elegy for the Twentieth Century. It will make you laugh, it may make you cry, but you will find it hard to put down before you reach the twist in the tail. Seth's secret revealed (1/4 people found this helpful)At last, the enigma of Vikram Seth is uncovered. We now understand why his books are intelectually underpowered and don't actually go anywhere. Seth admires people in his own family who have gone their own way- created their own destiny- and this is what he himself has done. By turning his back on the world of ideas and political engagement, he has created his own market, his own readership- and that readership is good hearted, sentimental, deeply ignorant (where is Germany? Well, it's a country in Europe and it was ruled by this really nasty guy called Hitler etc.)and needs desparately to be protected from thought.
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Books -> Subjects -> Biography -> General
Books -> Subjects -> Biography -> General AAS Books -> Refinements -> Language (feature_browse-bin) -> English Books -> Refinements -> Age (feature_two_browse-bin) Books -> Refinements -> Format (binding_browse-bin) -> Paperback Books -> Refinements -> Condition (condition-type)
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