
Brick Lane
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Narrated by:
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Elizabeth Sastre
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By:
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Monica Ali
About this listen
While Nanzeen journeys along her path of self-realization, her sister, Hasina, rushes headlong at her life. Woven through the novel, Hasina's letters from Dhaka recount a world of overwhelming adversity. Shaped, yet not bound, by their landscapes and memories, both sisters struggle to dream, and live, beyond the rules prescribed for them.
©2003 Monica Ali (P)2003 HighBridge CompanyCritic reviews
- Audie Award Winner, Fiction (Abridged), 2004
"A humanely forgiving story about love...Brick Lane may be Ali's first novel, but it is written with a wisdom and skill that few other authors attain in a lifetime." (Sunday Times [London])
"Carefully observed and assured...its power residing in Ali's unsparing scrutiny of its hapless, hopeful protagonists." (Publishers Weekly)
"A splendid novel." (Atlantic Monthly)
"A sharp-witted tale...In Ali's subtle narration, Nazneen's mixture of traditionalism and adaptability, of acceptance and restlessness, emerges as a quiet strength." (The New Yorker)
Interesting view of Bangladeshi life in inhospitable London..
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I found the story very engrossing - following the life of a couple of immigrants from Bengal and their family. Half of the book is told from the point of view of a sister, Hasina, who is left behind in India, the other half from the viewpoint of the other sister, Nasreen, who marries a man living in England.
Halfway through the book, the plot takes an unlikely twist when Nasreen suddenly begins an affair with a young Bengali man. There is no description or mention of exactly how the affair begins; 1 minute she's taking in sewing from him, the next minute they're suddenly in bed together with no preliminary whatsoever. Apart from that the story is excellent. The reader is given a real taste of the racial tensions in the UK between whites and Bengalis.
Excellent immigrant tale
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Captivating narration, but incomplete
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