Veeraraghavan S. (sleepless) reviewed on + 14 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 7
You can tell the author is male.
At halfway point in the book, the hero runs off to another country with a woman, staying on her luxury estate in Africa for 20 years. It is not until the closing pages of the book that the author clarifies whether or not they married. Children (of this couple) are not mentioned, though there is a large estate to inherit. A woman would have provided these details.
The starting point of the book is very interesting - a high caste Hindu male tells his parents he has married a very low caste woman - this is done as a form of rebellion. They never really get married, which is why the details of their son's marriage are so important.
Mr. Naipaul has written a stripped down, depressive book full of existential angst. In real life, people set goals and challenges for themselves, and take please in meeting them. In this book, characters are tiny wisps of dust, whose lives are changed by momentary decisions or the threads of fate.
Spoiler: the last line leaves absolutely everything unresolved.
At halfway point in the book, the hero runs off to another country with a woman, staying on her luxury estate in Africa for 20 years. It is not until the closing pages of the book that the author clarifies whether or not they married. Children (of this couple) are not mentioned, though there is a large estate to inherit. A woman would have provided these details.
The starting point of the book is very interesting - a high caste Hindu male tells his parents he has married a very low caste woman - this is done as a form of rebellion. They never really get married, which is why the details of their son's marriage are so important.
Mr. Naipaul has written a stripped down, depressive book full of existential angst. In real life, people set goals and challenges for themselves, and take please in meeting them. In this book, characters are tiny wisps of dust, whose lives are changed by momentary decisions or the threads of fate.
Spoiler: the last line leaves absolutely everything unresolved.
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