3.0 out of 5 stars
Wonderful writing, but not my favourite, Feb 21 2012
I really wanted to like this book more than I did. This was a book chosen for my monthly book club and I was quite happy that it was chosen because it had been sitting on my shelf for quite some time, without me having given it a second glance whenever I'd go to pick out something to read.
The God of Small Things is about Indian twins, Rahil and Estha, who learn that their whole world can change in a day. It's a story about love ' namely, the 'laws of love.'
Arundhati Roy is a magnificent writer. The whole story was written so beautifully, lyrically and poetic. Had I not been on a deadline to finish the book, I would have slowed down considerably in my reading to really take in the text. Roy plays with words, rhyming them, stretching them, flipping them backwards. She capitalizes certain ideas or phrases to give them meaning, and relies on foreshadowing ' a whole mess of foreshadowing ' to tell her story.
I really liked how, at the beginning of the story, the reader knows ' to an extent ' what happened. We don't know the details, but we know something is up. The rest of the novel is the story unfolding through the eyes of a child. It's disjointed and slightly confusing at times, but Roy does a good job of using repetition to hone in on certain important details. I read the whole novel only feeling a little confused, which isn't what I expected when I first started reading.
The characters are so well outlined, that it was so easy to love the twins and to hate their 'baby aunt' Baby Kochamma. There was politics mentioned throughout the novel, which I understood the basics of, but probably not the full extent of it. Roy's main theme, as mentioned above, is love and the 'laws of love,' which outline who citizens of certain castes are to love ' and how much.
While it feels like I'm praising the novel extensively, I'm not going to say this is going in the archives as one of my favourites. I appreciated what Roy was doing with her story, but it wasn't the story that I loved ' it was the writing of it. I loved the poetic quality of it, how certain phrases or sentences or paragraphs rolled off the tongue in a rhythm all their own. This isn't something that's normally seen in novels, so it was nice to read something different.
Of course, the whole novel isn't wonderful poetry, beautiful descriptions, and the upside of love. In fact, the book is quite dark and there are some very dark themes throughout ' most of which will make readers cringe. The thing that got me was that the novel was so dark, but I wasn't left feeling sorrowful after it was over. I wasn't left feeling elated and high in spirits, but it wasn't a story that dragged me down.
If you're looking to read a wonderfully-written classic novel, read The God of Small Things. If anything, the words will take your breath away.
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4.0 out of 5 stars
Love, life and loss of innocence, Mar 6 2000
This review is from: The God of Small Things (Paperback)
Darkly disturbing and beautifully writing, Arundhati Roy has written an extraordinary first novel. Her voice is fresh and ripe with metaphor as the reader is surrounded by the world of southern India. Told through the eyes of Rahel, now grown, who revisits the childhood secret she shares with her twin brother, it speaks of love, life and a loss of innocence.
They live in Kerula, a Christian matriarchal state, with their divorced mother, blind grandmother, bitter aunt and sad uncle. It is a world where impending communism is supposed to be weakening the caste system which has been rooted in the culture for thousands of years. It is a world of decay and disaster. There's a skyblue Plymouth, a graygreen river and a world of wonder for the two-egg twins whose vision is filtered through their clear-eyed innocence.
The story is one of passion and forbidden love told with fresh eyes while "night's elbows rested on the water and watched.....". It grabs the reader with an emotional quality that goes far beyond the particular characters and even the particular setting. This is a book to be savored, thought about deeply, and, perhaps even read for a second time.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
An impressive story, April 6 2005
This is the first book I have read by this author and I am glad that it is his debut book. The story is lovely and convinced me that Arundhati Roy is a great storyteller. Many of the characters are rich and original and the story is full of credible twists and turns, making it the interesting read that readers are always looking for.
This fascinating novel that is set in India in the late 60s begins with the funeral of a cousin of the novel's narrator. Rahelas she is called shares with her twin brother Estha share family secrets that are masterfully presented to the reader in this gripping, suspenseful and revealing prose that is told from the point of a child. Rich in characters and an amazing plot, The God of Small Things takes you into the fascinating setting of India , its politics, rich culture , unique social and caste system, numerous taboos, and its turbulent rich which all have an influence on the characters of the story. A highly recommended read:
Also recommended: DISCIPLES OF FORTUNE, NAMESAKE,THE KITE RUNNER, THE USURPER AND OTHER STORIES
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