Selected Product: | The Namesake: A Portrait of the Film Based on the Novel by Jhumpa Lahiri (Newmarket Pictorial Moviebooks) Hardcover Edition: New title Publisher: Newmarket Release Date: 2006-12-18 ISBN-10: 1557047413 ISBN-13: 9781557047410 List Price: $30.00 Average Customer Rating: | | Unaccustomed Earth ISBN-10: 0307265730 ISBN-13: 9780307265739 List Price:$25.00 Snow Flower and the Secret Fan: A Novel ISBN-10: 0812968069 ISBN-13: 9780812968064 List Price:$14.00 Interpreter of Maladies ISBN-10: 039592720X ISBN-13: 0046442927208 List Price:$13.00 Interpreter of Maladies (Edition 001) ISBN-10: 039592720X ISBN-13: 9780395927205 List Price:$14.95 The Inheritance of Loss ISBN-10: 0802142818 ISBN-13: 9780802142818 List Price:$14.00 |
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In her essay "Writing and Film," the Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist Jhumpa Lahiri writes about the experience of seeing her novel "transposed" from paper to film. "Its essence remains, but it inhabits a different realm and must, like a transposed piece of music, conform to a different set of rules….To have someone as devoted and as gifted as Mira reinvent my novel…has been a humbling and thrilling passage."
Mira Nair's essay, "Photographs as Inspiration," begins with the provocative comment: "If it weren't for photography, I wouldn't be a filmmaker." She explains how photographs help her crystallize the visual style of her films and which particular photos influenced her vision for The Namesake.
These two essays, written exclusively for this Newmarket Pictorial Moviebook, introduce an amazing panoply of images of people and places shot mainly in New York and Calcutta during the making of the movie, accented by excerpts from Lahiri's bestselling novel. Six Indian and American photographers' works are represented.
Brilliantly illuminating the immigrant experience and the tangled ties between generations, The Namesake tells the story of the Ganguli family, whose move from Calcutta to New York evokes a lifelong balancing act to adapt to a new world while remembering the old. The couple's firstborn, Gogol, and sister Sonia grow up amid these divided loyalties, struggling to find their own identity without losing their heritage. Kal Penn (Harold & Kumar Go to White Castle, Superman Returns) stars as Gogol. Starts very strong | Customer Rating: | The strength of "The Namesake" is highest when the focus is not actually on the namesake Gogol. I preferred the early chapters on his parents, their move to the US, and the early immigrant experience. The author's observations about America are sharp, and their background as Bengalis, as opposed to other origin (Indian and non-Indian) was fresh (to me). Even when Gogol is young, the child is a vehicle for cultural and family topics.
The novel has two relatively weak spots. The whole stretch with the rich, lefty, New Yorkers did not resonate. It was all too perfect. Part of the problem is that Gogol himself is not that interesting, or at least he isn't portrayed as particularly engaging or reflective. Why exactly do they like him so much? I suppose it was the author's point to show how easily the next generation can fall into luxury and forget its origins, and how American liberal-minded folks can accept an ethnic into the inner circle. The section offered little insight.
The ending was also rather basic. A novel that is not plot-driven, and is more of a series of observations and themes that play out, can be difficult to wrap up, as there is no climax, nor are there loose ends to tie. Thus, the winding down was ok. Fortunately, the mother had returned to be other than a fading background character. | IT captivated me i do not know why.... | Customer Rating: | | this book was boring and yet it captivated my attention throughout, i felt like i knew all the characters , Although it is not THE BEST BOOK EVER WRITTEN, its worth a read | You felt like you knew these people | Customer Rating: | | She captures little idiosyncracies that are really authentic. You get attached to the characters. The ending (I don't want to spoil it for you so I wont tell you what happens at the end) makes you think wait what just happened. | not as good as the short story collections | Customer Rating: | The Namesake, the first novel by Jhumpa Lahiri, is written in a deceptively simple style. It is a very well crafter novel that both explores the role of Indians in America, and tells the story of a family over several decades. Unfortunately, I have to say that I was somewhat disappointed by the novel. Lahiri's collection of stories, "The Interpreter of Maladies" had a much larger impact on me. A version of "The Namesake" also appeared as a short story in The New Yorker, and I liked that version far better. I agree that Lahiri is among the best writers in the US currently, but short stories are her definite strength. | A great and superbly written story | Customer Rating: | Jhumpa Lahiri writes about a very interesting and commonly neglected new American phenomenon: the rise of the Indian-American middle class.
This book is about cultures, values, life and death, love and misery. It is about America. It is about India. It is also universal.
Lahiri writes with style and elegance. Despite the verbose, I was engaged on the story and how it unfolded. "Namesake" is a great reading. |
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