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ManyWordsLater
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Just picked this book up from the library and am going to drop everything to read it right now.

It‘s about Muslim women in India questioning the patriarchy and caste system.

Should I look up all the cultural words I didn‘t know or just assume I‘ll learn from context?

#selfguidedcourseinwomenandgenderstudies

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Suet624
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I‘m alternating reading these two books, both story collections. They could not be further apart in tone and content. 😂😂😂 if you know, you know. One is a Booker prize winner and one was given 5 stars by Jenny of Reading Envy.

Billypar No shade to the Booker Prize, but the second endorsement will always be more meaningful to me (RIP Jenny 💙💙) 2mo
Suet624 @Billypar beautifully put. 2mo
sarahbarnes I like to have a short story collection going a lot of the time in the midst of other things I‘m reading. I liked most of the stories in Heart Lamp quite a bit. 2mo
Suet624 @sarahbarnes I just finished the story of the Village circumcision! 😬 I'm getting used to the stories - took me a minute..
2mo
sarahbarnes Yes, that one was something else!! It did take me a minute to get into the rhythm of them. I loved learning about the author. 2mo
48 likes5 comments
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Bookwormjillk
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Somehow between all of these storms we got a beautiful night for field hockey. Don‘t worry I‘ll put my book down when the game starts.

kspenmoll Today was gorgeous here-breezy! 5mo
Bookwormjillk @kspenmoll I wish I could bottle this up and save it for next week! 5mo
66 likes2 comments
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Graywacke
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Pickpick

The IB Prize winner

The stories are Wharton-esque

The author is a native Kannada speaker, and also activist, lawyer and feminist. Kannada has 60 million speakers, and is older than Hindi.

These stories do not directly challenge cultural norms. The characters all exist in their Muslim Indian world and accept their realities, including their economic reality, as the natural order. It's within this mindset that BM‘s feminism lays its hands.

56 likes2 comments
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RaeLovesToRead
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Pickpick

Heart Lamp is a worthy winner of the International Booker Prize 2025.

Translated from Kannada, this is a collection of short stories centring the lives of Muslim women in India.

Most of them are splendid and showcase not only a warm writing talent, but also the layers of pain and hardship suffered in a patriarchal society.

There were only two that I felt lacked a point or direction.

Contemplative, human, heart-breaking.

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

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TalesandTexts
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Pickpick

Tender & vulnerable, Heart Lamp explores the lives of Muslim women in rural Karnataka. But it isn‘t just a story of one community - rather it is the story of girls and women - the forced silences, the harsh hurts, the piercing dismissals and the painful denials that we women are made to confront, at the hands of the patriarchal societies we inhabit and the men in our lives.

These stories may seem simple - but they are real and universal.

Suet624 Great review. 2mo
21 likes3 stack adds1 comment
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RaeLovesToRead
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I'm only 2 stories in, but they've both been brilliant so far.

65 likes1 stack add
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RaeLovesToRead
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Well my prediction couldn't have been more wrong!

Well done to Banu Mushtaq, Deepa Bhasthi and Heart Lamp for winning the International Booker Prize 2025!

I shall be giving it a read and reviewing it on my channel. If you want to hear my thoughts on the other nominees, I do a brief rundown in my prediction vid.

Every book on the shortlist was good 😊

BarbaraBB I agree! They all were good. And I didn‘t read the winner either 🤦🏻‍♀️ 6mo
RaeLovesToRead @BarbaraBB I've just read the first story and I feel I may have underestimated it! Probably because the covers are so unappealing. I don't mind minimalist covers, but the text on the front and the monochrome doesn't work for me! 6mo
60 likes2 comments
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Tripex
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Hey, you've read it?

Suet624 Nope! I definitely will though. 6mo
Tripex @Suet624 👏🏾 6mo
21 likes2 comments
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TalesandTexts
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So happy and proud this book won the Booker Prize 2025!

My country, my region and my beloved native language Kannada.

One of the oldest languages in the world - so glad other readers can get a taste of our language!

A poignant set of stories that explore the day to day lives of Muslim women ; and also capture the shared cultural legacies of Indian and South Asian women!

BarbaraBB Happy for you! I will read the book soon! 6mo
TalesandTexts Happy reading! This book is so reminiscent of the places my mother and her parents grew up in; and the stories show the very real day-to-day lives of people my elders used to interact with. This book is a game changer to the Booker Prize and does away with the notion that only books form certain regions or certain types of translations should win. So glad the judges have opened up this space for more diverse voices! 6mo
21 likes1 stack add2 comments