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Clear Light of the Day
Clear Light of the Day | by Anita Desai
3 posts | 7 read | 10 to read
A rich, Chekhovian novel by one of the most gifted of contemporary Indianwriters - The New Yorkerthe youngest, Tara - now a mother of two - has returned from America to thescene of her unusual, lonesome childhood.Here, as always, is her sister Bim, doggedly single college lecturer andcaretaker of all. In her presence, Tara sinks into the blissful torpor of home, atonce her dreamy old self, but careful as ever around her older sister. For at theheart of this reunion are numerous tensions: their autistic brother Baba isincreasingly unquiet; Bim has not spoken to their other brother, Raja, for yearsand refuses to go to his daughter s wedding; Tara feels the persistent guilt ofhaving, like the others, abandoned her. Spanning the post-independence yearsfrom the 40s to the 80s, the sisters recall the death of Gandhi along with thoseof their parents, Raja s infatuation with their neighboring Muslim family andthe violence of Partition. For here is the tale of both modern India and onefamily s struggle against disintegration. Clear Light of Day is vintage AnitaDesai, a novel as wonderfully contemplative as a cup of afternoon tea.
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review
Sophronisba
Clear Light of the Day | by Anita Desai
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Pickpick

Maaaaybe a little bit pat in the end but I just could not get over how beautifully written it was. The kind of book that makes you want to just luxuriate in its sentences. For a 184-page book, that's enough.

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Sophronisba
Clear Light of Day | Anita Desai
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“The koels began to call before daylight. Their voices rang out from the dark trees like an arrangement of bells, calling and echoing each others‘ calls, mocking and enticing each other into ever higher and shriller calls.“

#FridayReads #FirstLineFriday

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allisoncraven
Clear Light of Day | Anita Desai
Pickpick

Loved every single female character and how they comprehended one another's lives in relation to their own.