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The Tiger Claw
 
 

The Tiger Claw (Hardcover)

by Shauna Singh Baldwin (Author)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Product Description

Books in Canada

Novelists often seek to comment on the present by looking to the past. This is particularly true in Canada, where novels set in earlier eras seem to reproduce with the persistence of cultures in a Petri dish. Shauna Singh Baldwin’s novel, The Tiger Claw, a nominee for the 2004 Giller Prize, is a fictionalized account of the life of Noor Inayat Khan, an Indian Muslim, who worked as a spy for the Allies’ Special Operations Executive during World War II, and who was eventually captured and imprisoned by the Germans. (I’m not giving anything away here: the book opens with Noor confined to a prison cell in Pforzheim, Germany, then flashes back to describe how she got there.)
Noor is a woman of mixed descent: her father is Indian and her mother is from Boston. Born in Moscow, as a child Noor and her family move around frequently, living variously in England, India, and Paris, though it is this last city that is home to Noor for most of her life. It is in Paris that Noor meets and falls in love with a Jewish musician named Armand Rivkin, a love that alienates a number of her Muslim relatives, particularly her brother Kabir and her severe Uncle Tajuddin, a teacher at the local Sufi school, who lectures on subjects such as “Love, Beauty and Tolerance,” but privately berates Noor for shaming her family by “consorting with unbelievers.”
When Noor becomes pregnant with Armand’s child, her uncle is furious, comparing her to a “Montmartre prostitute” and accusing her of committing “the sin of loving without permission.” In one of the clandestine prison notes that Noor writes to her unborn child, whom (in one of Singh Baldwin’s imaginative elaborations on the historical Noor’s story) she aborted in the 1930s, shortly after discovering that she was pregnant, Noor laments that “my body belonged not to me but to my family, and it was my uncle’s right to say yea or nay to marriage.”
Noor’s Uncle Tajuddin is only one in a line of bigoted and intolerant figures who treat Noor alternately with condescension, suspicion, or outright loathing. Even Miss Atkins, one of Noor’s handlers in the SOE, resorts to an attitude of disdain and derision in dealing with her new charge. When Noor suggests that India is ready for self-government, Miss Atkins’s response is freighted with all of the racist arrogance implicit in the British Raj: “Indians? Oh, don’t be silly … They’re not ready for freedom or democracy-haven’t a clue. Really, do try being a little more politic. It surprises me the board approved you. But I’ve long resigned myself to working with flawed material.”
The cancer of intolerance lends the novel much of its thematic heft, and finds its apogee in the Nazi pogroms that began in earnest with Kristallnacht and led in a direct line to the abominations of Auschwitz and Dachau. The Nazis embody a more virulent form of the racial hatred espoused by Noor’s Uncle Tajuddin, but the novel invites its readers to see the various iterations of bigotry and intolerance in the story not as discrete units, but rather as points on a continuum, building to a critical mass that erupts in the Nazis’ program of genocide in Europe.
Similarly, the novel also invites its readers to view its subject matter at least partly through the prism of recent events. Although Singh Baldwin would surely not go so far as to equate the Nazi period with the global predicament in the post-9/11 world, the novel points out disturbing parallels between then and now, which in aggregate are impossible to ignore. One scene in the novel has Noor meeting with members of the French resistance at a patisserie, when a commotion erupts on the street outside. One of the patrons of the pastry shop identifies the disturbance as a “shanghaillage”, a rounding up of Hasidic Jews for deportation to Germany. “‘Probably criminals,’ he assured everyone with Panglossian equanimity. ‘Terrorists.’”
The word, loaded down as it is with recent historical baggage, is not idly chosen, nor is the intimation that a group of extremist ideologues can effectively co-opt public fear of terror and sabotage to randomly persecute an identifiable group of people. When Noor is imprisoned, her chief captor, Ernst Vogel tells her that following the burning of the Reichstag-“a day no civilized person can ever forget”-Hitler declared a state of emergency and vowed war on terrorism. “And that first emergency decree,” Noor thinks, “has made arrest on suspicion, imprisonment without trial in camps and executions possible in Germany and beyond ever since.” The reverberations with the post-9/11 historical record are clear, and surely not accidental.
The underlying motivation behind the rhetoric of fear, and its accompanying curtailment of human rights and civil liberties-then as now-is power, and Singh Baldwin finds no small irony in Noor’s fighting on behalf of the very people who proudly point to her father’s homeland as the jewel in the crown of the British Empire. When her captor intimates that the Germans would be more empathetic rulers than the British Raj, she is moved to think, “No matter who the colonizer, no matter who the colonized, there is no such thing as benign occupation.” She continues:

“I have claimed my life,” Noor thinks, “but never yet lived my life as my own. … I might as well be in India, starving, beaten or imprisoned without trial. … Other people’s decisions have governed each moment of my life, limiting each choice by past decisions, decisions made by others before they ever met me.”

Noor’s most fervent craving is to live freely, according to the dictates of her own will and desires. Freedom from the oppression of those who would govern her life for her-be it her Uncle Tajuddin or the Nazis-becomes the nucleus of her resistance, and, Singh Baldwin suggests, the locus of her heroism.
The attitude of the novel is largely a romantic one; it is Noor’s love for Armand-a forbidden love, tainted by prejudice and racial animosity-that keeps her moving forward, risking her life in the name of freedom and the desperate hope that she might someday be reunited with her lover. In this sense, Singh Baldwin’s vision in the novel is an optimistic one, since it is located in the notion that the struggle for love and freedom is an essentially noble and heroic endeavour, which we abandon at the cost of losing our humanity. As long as Noor resists the forces of Fascism, she remains in her essence free and fully human.
In a lengthy essay published a short while ago in the New York Times Book Review, Philip Roth comments, “History claims everybody, whether they know it or not and whether they like it or not.” Singh Baldwin’s perspective in The Tiger Claw seems somewhat less fatalistic, and although history claimed Noor Inayat Khan, her ultimate fate is, in the context of the novel, less significant than the fact that she never succumbed to the stifling, poisonous tides of oppression and hatred, even during one of the darkest periods of the twentieth century.
Singh Baldwin includes in the novel a story, perhaps apocryphal, that Noor scratched into the wall of her cell the words, ‘I resist, therefore I am.’ Noor was unable to escape the dizzying, headlong rush of history but, to her dying breath, she refused to capitulate to it. There’s a lesson there somewhere, if we are willing to listen.
Steven W. Beattie (Books in Canada)

Review

“Baldwin’s luminous prose captures the reader’s attention. . . . [She] immerses the reader in the atmosphere of the Vichy era, replete with undercurrents of terror and prejudice. . . . Readers, especially those interested in history and politics, will be intrigued by this gripping, richly textured novel penned by a consummate storyteller.”
Winnipeg Free Press

“Baldwin has succeeded in crafting yet another indelible story based in fact.”
The Edmonton Journal

The Tiger Claw brilliantly reveals the shifting sands of allegiance in times of war and the duplicity required for survival when all who are operating underground are interdependent but no one can be trusted fully.”
The Gazette (Montreal)

The Tiger Claw is a brilliant novel, a harrowing story of espionage and love, of loyalty and betrayal in the treacherous world of WWII Europe. Shauna Singh Baldwin has an astonishing ability to paint a very large canvas with amazing detail. You are there. ‘Impressive’ hardly even begins to describe it: masterful. I could not put it down. A stunning achievement, but most of all, important.”
—Sandra Gulland

“A deeply felt, richly evocative novel that resurrects and reinvents a remarkable life, The Tiger Claw tells an affecting story of love and loss amidst the turbulence of war and human dislocation. It confirms Shauna Singh Baldwin as a major literary voice that transcends the borders that divide human experience.”
—Shashi Tharoor

The Tiger Claw is a fascinating story of moral complexity, inner conflict and exile, a magnificent portrait of a very courageous woman, Noor Inayat Khan, the legendary French Resistance fighter, whose divided conscience is reflected in the drama of Nazi-occupied France and British-occupied India. That Noor strikes us a modern figure of heroism and doubt is because of the compelling vision of Shauna Singh Baldwin.”
—Marie-Claire Blais

Praise for What the Body Remembers:
“A stunning first novel. Intensely atmospheric — an artistic triumph.”
Publishers Weekly (starred review)

“An impressive achievement. . .rich, fascinating, epic. . . An original, extremely readable book that dramatizes the plight of Indian women with great sympathy and love.”
The Gazette (Montreal)

“A captivating jewel of a novel by a seasoned and sophisticated writer. . . Beyond being a compelling tale of individuals, What the Body Remembers offers a gimlet-eyed view of a pluralistic society’s disintegration into factionalism and anarchy.”
The Washington Post

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Riveting and Entertaining, Jun 22 2008
By Toni Osborne "The Way I See It" (Montreal, Canada) - See all my reviews
(TOP 100 REVIEWER)   
Noor Khan parented by a teacher of mystical Sufism falls in love with Armand Rivkin a Jewish pianist but is forbidden to see him in the name of religion and propriety. When the Germans invade France in 1940, Noor and her family are forced to flee to England for their safety. Once there, due to Noors background she is recruited by the special intelligence agency and is sent to France to contribute to the underground resistance movement. With this mission she hopes to reunite with her true love..

This is the story of Noor Khan code name Madeleine who worked against the Nazi regime during the Occupation of France. It is a war story, a quest for love, a tale of espionage and resistance. The main character is Noor a woman of mixed parentage that had no roots in England, was not readily accepted in France or India and due to her language skills made her the perfect spy material. I find this novel excellent, the prose capture the essence of the time and immerses you immediately in the atmosphere of the Vichy era complete with its terror and prejudice. Ms Balwin tells a highly riveting and entertaining story, I thoroughly enjoy it.

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4.0 out of 5 stars Profound WWII Thriller - A Real Page Turner, Jan 29 2005
By PJ_RICE (Ontario, Canada) - See all my reviews
Often reading authors unknown to me, I'll go through several books before one this good comes along. It kept me up late for several days. History seamlessly blends with fiction as Noor Inayat Khan, an Indian Muslim woman who grew up in France, finds herself back in German-occupied France, spying for Britain. If that's not complicated enough, she's in love with Armand, a Jewish native of France who's been imprisoned by the Nazis. As Noor precariously sends her radio messages to London and meets a network of other British agents, she desparately tries to get closer to Armand. The book offers page after page of breath-holding tension as the Nazi tentacles slowly close around the British network - is there a traitor feeding their names to the Gestapo? Apart from the excitement, other themes emerge. Noor reflects upon the relationship between occupiers and the occupied, as between the British and her parent's India. The characters are richly developed and on many occasions the reader shares their pain - and their hope- deeply. On one level the book is a very entertaining thriller; on another it is extremely insightful, posing very profound questions about human and societal relationships. Despite the at times gut-wrenching pathos, this books is a fabulous and very satisfying read and I highly recommend it to lovers of history, thrillers, espionage and fiction in general.
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