PDF Download Noon: A Novel, by Aatish Taseer
Superb Noon: A Novel, By Aatish Taseer publication is constantly being the very best friend for investing little time in your office, evening time, bus, and all over. It will be a great way to just look, open, and also check out guide Noon: A Novel, By Aatish Taseer while because time. As understood, encounter as well as skill don't consistently come with the much cash to acquire them. Reading this book with the title Noon: A Novel, By Aatish Taseer will let you recognize much more points.
Noon: A Novel, by Aatish Taseer
PDF Download Noon: A Novel, by Aatish Taseer
Noon: A Novel, By Aatish Taseer. Haggling with reviewing habit is no requirement. Reviewing Noon: A Novel, By Aatish Taseer is not sort of something offered that you can take or otherwise. It is a thing that will change your life to life much better. It is the many things that will give you numerous things worldwide as well as this cosmos, in the real life and also here after. As what will be offered by this Noon: A Novel, By Aatish Taseer, how can you haggle with the important things that has several advantages for you?
Reading habit will certainly always lead people not to completely satisfied reading Noon: A Novel, By Aatish Taseer, a publication, 10 publication, hundreds e-books, and more. One that will certainly make them really feel completely satisfied is finishing reading this e-book Noon: A Novel, By Aatish Taseer as well as obtaining the message of guides, then discovering the other following book to check out. It continues an increasing number of. The moment to finish reading an e-book Noon: A Novel, By Aatish Taseer will certainly be constantly different depending on spar time to invest; one instance is this Noon: A Novel, By Aatish Taseer
Now, exactly how do you recognize where to acquire this e-book Noon: A Novel, By Aatish Taseer Don't bother, now you could not go to guide store under the intense sun or evening to search guide Noon: A Novel, By Aatish Taseer We here always assist you to find hundreds type of book. Among them is this e-book qualified Noon: A Novel, By Aatish Taseer You could go to the web link page given in this collection then choose downloading and install. It will certainly not take more times. Just hook up to your website gain access to as well as you can access guide Noon: A Novel, By Aatish Taseer on-line. Certainly, after downloading Noon: A Novel, By Aatish Taseer, you could not publish it.
You could save the soft documents of this book Noon: A Novel, By Aatish Taseer It will certainly rely on your extra time and also tasks to open as well as review this e-book Noon: A Novel, By Aatish Taseer soft documents. So, you might not hesitate to bring this publication Noon: A Novel, By Aatish Taseer anywhere you go. Merely include this sot data to your kitchen appliance or computer system disk to allow you review each time as well as anywhere you have time.
Rehan Tabassum has grown up in a world of privilege in Delhi. His mother and her new husband embody the dazzling emergent India everyone is talking about. His real father, however, is a virtual stranger to him: a Pakistani Muslim who lives across the border and owns a vast telecommunications empire called Qasimic Call.
As Rehan contemplates his future, he finds himself becoming unmoored. Leaving the familiarity of home for Pakistan in an attempt to get closer to his father, he is drawn into events he barely understands. His half brother, Isffy, is being blackmailed; his powerful father's entourage is tearing itself apart; and the city of Port Bin Qasim, where he finds himself, is filled with rioting protestors. Moral danger lurks in every corner of this dark, shifting, and unfamiliar world.
Set against the background of a turbulent Pakistan and a rapidly changing India, Noon is a startling and powerfully charged novel from a brilliant young writer. Aatish Taseer bears witness to some of the most urgent questions of our times, questions about nationhood and violence, family and identity.
- Sales Rank: #1773901 in Books
- Brand: Brand: Faber Faber
- Published on: 2012-10-02
- Released on: 2012-10-02
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Dimensions: 8.00" h x .77" w x 5.19" l, .60 pounds
- Binding: Paperback
- 304 pages
- Used Book in Good Condition
Review
“Combining a heady cocktail of theft, blackmail and dysfunctional family relations with a touch of the Kafkaesque, this is a powerfully written and deeply thoughtful work.” ―Anna Scott, The Guardian
“A meditative, occasionally jolting novel by Aatish Taseer, the 31-year-old son of the former governor of Punjab, Salman Taseer . . . [A] blackmail plotline provides the novel with its brutal climax--and deepens the perception that Pakistan is both decadent and abnegating, irrevocably Westernized and violently closed off. The novel's smart coda . . . does nothing to reconcile or rationalize these contradictions. No sense trying to do so, seems to be the message of this intelligent, unsettling novel--a theme only a fiction writer could express in such a satisfactory way.” ―Taylor Antrim, The Daily Beast
“Naipaul's praise is rare enough to be notable; and Taseer lives up to it . . . Among the sharpest and best-written fictions about . . . contemporary India.” ―The Independent
“[A] tangle of politics, murder, bribery and betrayal . . . Gripping.” ―The Observer
“Noon's careful yet nimble prose captures the visceral quality of this world in decline through a keenly critical and coldly detached lens . . . Moral corruption, greed, and violence are not glamorized or sensationalized; they are recursive facts of life, eternally returning as Nietzsche would've guessed, and modern day Pakistan is not immune . . . It pops with the verve of a great detective story, filled with suspense and scandal, but also empathy and even meta-fiction.” ―Stephen Spencer, Electric Literature
About the Author
Aatish Taseer was born in 1980. He has worked as a reporter for Time magazine and has written for The Sunday Times (London), the Financial Times, Prospect, TAR, and Esquire. He is the author of Stranger to History: A Son's Journey Through Islamic Lands (2009) and is the highly acclaimed translator of Manto: Selected Stories (2008). His novel The Temple-Goers was shortlisted for the 2010 Costa First Novel Award. He lives in Delhi and London.
Excerpt. � Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
NOON (Chapter 1)Last Rites
(1989)
'We passionately long for there to be another life in which we shall be similar to what we are here below. But we do not pause to reflect that, even without waiting for that other life, in this life, after a few years, we are unfaithful to what we once were, to what we wished to remain immortally.'
Remembrance of Things Past, Marcel Proust
The dressing table was the first thing she had bought herself since Sahil. It had attracted her, with its tiny bulbs, gilt and mirrors, from the pages of a foreign magazine. She decided at length to take the magazine down to the colony market and have the dressing table copied. Rati Ram, the carpenter, inspected it, seemed to translate its charms into an Indian reality, then agreed to reproduce it for a few hundred rupees. When he returned a few days later with his replica, thickly coated in gold paint, and decorated with fat full-sized bulbs and crudely cut strips of mirror, its arrival caused tension in the little house with the gardenia tree.
'Phansy shmansy,' her mother sniffed, as the men brought it in.
'Give me a break, Mama. You know very well I haven't so much as bought myself a salwar since I moved here. And it's not as if you're paying for it.'
'Who's saying I am! But let me remind you, I pay for other things. And they cost me an arm and a leg. Not that I'm not happy to do it. But I won't have you getting on your high horse.'
'Would you like me to thank you for it again? "Thank you, Mama, for paying Rehan's fees; I am eternally grateful and so is he." Happy?'
'Don't take that tone with me. He's my grandson. I'll give him what I like. I don't need you to thank me.'
Rehan looked into the house from the veranda, where moments before he had been servicing his gods, cleaning the idols, putting fresh marigolds in their tray. When he heard the raised voices, he slipped behind the cooler. Through its grey slats, the two women appeared to him as mute shadows, their voices drowned out by the whirr of the cooler's fan and the slurping of its pipes. He saw his mother pace and bring her palms together in frustration. His grandmother, in reply, threw up her arms and rushed out of the room, leaving Udaya alone. Rehan's gaze was diverted by drops of water growing fat along the cooler's soaked matting. They swelled, their bellies striped by the blaze. Then they fell fast and soundless to the few inches of dark water below. The room now was empty and a batch of fresh drops sprouted on the matting. Rehan returned to his gods.
Udaya had brought him to her mother's house as a temporary step after Sahil.
It had been impossible, once that relationship ended, to stay on in London. Not without Sahil. Who, after moving them out of his flat on Flood Street, became difficult and unreachable. He had always travelled a lot, between La Mirage, Dubai and London, and in the end, like an airline reducing its flights to a destination, he had come to London less and less. It had always only been an 'arrangement' forged fast when she became pregnant with Rehan. She had hung on to the hope that it would deepen. But after a last holiday in Kathmandu, to which Sahil brought along two children he claimed were his nephew and niece, the calls and visits came to an end.
Love was one reason she hung on in London; pride another. After the scandal of her relationship, she found it difficult to face her mother with the news that it was over, not three years after it had begun. She found work as a freelance lawyer, but made only enough to pay the rent on the north London bedsit they had moved into.
Then, several years after her last conversation with Sahil, she ran into an uncle, visiting from Delhi. It was a bleak moment; she had been forced to sell some jewellery the day before; in her weakness, she confessed everything. He convinced her to let him prepare the ground with her mother and a few weeks later Udaya returned, with Rehan, to rebuild her life in the city she had left some years before, trusting completely to passion.
It had made sense at first to stay with her mother. But no sooner had she arrived than the fights began. And, as with those of her childhood, they seemed never to be about what they were ostensibly about. If then the issue of cutting her hair or smoking or marriage had become an expression of some deeper tension between them, so, now too, seemingly innocuous things, such as the cleanliness of the kitchen, the trouble in Punjab and Rehan's upbringing became laden with their old animus. The difference was that they were not alone. Rehan, every day more aware, was there among them; and she was determined to save him the scenes. It had been fight enough to convince her mother to let Rehan feed himself. Udaya had a secret terror that her mother, well-intentioned as it might be, would instil in him, through that special brand of Indian compassion that debilitates when it means to commiserate, a feeling of want or misfortune. Rehan had given no indication of ever being aware of Sahil's absence; and though she had given him his father's name and even an explanation of a kind - Sometimes, just as you fight with your friends, grown-ups fight too - he had never seemed interested in knowing more. It made her happy to think of him as unscathed by their separation.
No, if she was to protect Rehan, she must find her own place, and quickly. She had already begun making enquiries.
From where he lay on the bed, Rehan could see just his mother's back, her long straight hair and a few inches of flesh trapped between her petticoat and blouse. She sat before the new dressing table, opening her mouth wide for lipstick, smacking her lips closed on a tissue and reaching for tweezers to remove stray hairs.
'Where are you going for dinner?' Rehan asked.
'It's a work dinner, baba. A client...'
'What's his name?'
'Amit, Amit Sethia.'
'What does he do?'
'He's an industrialist.'
'What's an industrialist?'
'Someone with industries. Coal, steel etc....'
'Is he rich?'
'Yes, baba,' Udaya said, closing one eye over a silver stick lined with kohl.
'Ma,' Rehan said abruptly, 'why do you hate Nani?' His mother blinked rapidly, half-turning around. An expression of withheld amusement and a threat to come clean played on her face.
'Rehan! What have you heard?'
'Nothing, Ma, really. I swear. I was just curious.'
'Why are you suddenly asking me if I hate your grandmother?'
'You both fight a lot so I was just wondering.'
Turning back to the mirror, but watching him closely with one kohled eye, she said, 'Well, it's not that I hate Nani, it's just that there comes a point in everyone's life when they stop seeing their mother or father as just their mother and father but as people. And sometimes you like those people for who they are, and sometimes you find, well, that you don't have much in common with them. Nani and I, for instance, have never had much in common. She didn't understand me; I couldn't understand her. We were miles apart. She believed in God and couldn't believe she'd produced a daughter who didn't. I couldn't believe she believed in a God who cared how long your hair was. I mean was this God a hairdresser?'
Rehan laughed loudly. He didn't mind her insulting her own Sikh god as long as she didn't begin on the Hindu ones, for which he had acquired an unlikely obsession since his arrival in India.
'She read Mills and Boons,' his mother continued, 'I didn't. She was forever concerned about respectability; I couldn't care less. When your aunt got married, she told me, "Now, it's too late for you. I've told your father to put some money aside, and bas, try and best make do." I was twenty-five! No, she was horrible!' Udaya, now nearly fully made up, smiled as she spoke and it seemed to drain her words of ill feeling. Rehan adored his grandmother, and it was unsettling that his mother, whose voice was like the voice of truth, could feel differently. He hated to be at odds with her. But whenever he tried to bring her around to his way of thinking, she would irritate him by taking an agree-to-disagree tone.
'I love Nani!' he said provocatively. 'And when her ship comes in, she's going to buy me Castle Grayskull for my gods to live in.'
'So you must,' his mother replied, reflecting on whether Rehan had been told what his grandmother's ship coming in would mean. 'She's been wonderful to you.'
'Stop talking in that fake voice!' Rehan yelled.
His mother smiled and turned her full attention to putting on her sari. She chose a handbag and, carefully, the things that went in it - all of which angered Rehan so much that he stormed out.
Summer power cuts and fluctuations had begun and the light in the corridor was dim. The disc-shaped ceiling light, high above like a white Frisbee, grew fainter and fainter, till its milky glass barely sustained a glow. Then like a small angry sun burning away a thick bank of clouds, it flared, sending Rehan fleeing down the stairs that separated his grandmother's section of the house from his mother's. Below, where the surge had ended and the light was dull and dusty again, servants were setting the table, lighting the odd white candle. Rehan slipped past his grandmother's room in the hope of beginning his favourite mythical movie, The Marriage of Shiva and Parvati, before dinner.
He had only been watching a few minutes when he heard his grandmother call him.
'No, no, Nani, please. Not now, just come here and see where we are.'
She wandered in a second later, wearing a loose, faded salwar kameez. Her greying hair was in a thin plait and when she sat down next to Rehan, he could smell Nivea cream on her. Her skin was smooth and her eyes, though losing colour, still shone. There was something coquettish about her smile of clean-capped teeth, giving, even now, the impression of a once-beautiful woman. Rehan grabbed her soft stomach and squeezed it. She pretended at first to be indifferent to the drama coming from the old Japanese VCR, but Re...
Most helpful customer reviews
21 of 21 people found the following review helpful.
Compelling storytelling
By FictionFan
This book reads more like a collection of short stories than a novel, showing as it does distinct episodes in the life of Rehan Tabassum set several years apart. Written sometimes in the first-person and sometimes in the third, we see Rehan first as a young man on his way to meet his father who abandoned his mother when Rehan was too young to remember him. The following four chapters focus on incidents in Rehan's life from when he was a child until the present when he is a young man.
Rehan's life, as a young man with an Indian mother, an absent father in Pakistan and a western education, seems to mirror the author's own life and the book comes over as autobiographical in style. The various stories provide glimpses into the divisions in society in both India and Pakistan, the contrasts between the wealth and power of the new industrialists and the simultaneous fading of the old privileged classes, the casual corruption and cruelty that seem to be part of everyday life and the rise of the more militant form of Islamism. Without in any way dwelling on terrorism, the author makes reference to it and highlights the growing hatred of western values and the colonial legacy, embodied often by the use of the English language amongst the elite.
The tone of the book was quite pessimistic about the societies of both India and Pakistan. The role of women came across as very minor and subordinate - both of Rehan's father figures had left wives for younger women and after Rehan's childhood years the women were barely mentioned. The scenes of mild torture casually employed by the police, the continuing class and caste divides, the contrasts of extreme poverty and extreme wealth, the street riots - I was left wanting to see some of the positives that surely must exist to counterbalance these negative images.
Overall, however, I found the author to be a very effective and compelling storyteller. While I didn't feel the book held quite together as a novel, I found each chapter to be a fully formed story in its own right. There were many cultural and religious references in the book that I didn't get and the author didn't explain (why should he?) but I didn't find this marred my understanding or enjoyment of the book. I will certainly look out for more from this author in the future.
15 of 16 people found the following review helpful.
Sharp and insightful look at at changes in India/Pakistan
By Ripple
"Noon" sits somewhere between a collection of related short stories and a full blown novel in that it tells four different episodes on Rehan Tabassum's life spread over a couple of decades. It explores some large issues though.
Rehan grows up in a privileged Indian society while his estranged father is a big shot in neighboring Pakistan. Added to this cultural melting pot, Rehan is studying in America and has what might be termed a Western outlook on things. His father, Sahil remains a shaddowy figure throughout the book. The book cleverly exposes the ways that Rehan gets drawn into the cultural values of first India and then Pakistan in his actions despite initial resistance. Aatish Taseer is particularly damning about the self-destructive forces in Pakistan in the final chapter of the book as he seeks to connect with his father while living in the moral mess of Port bin Qasim.
The first two episodes/chapters are shorter - the first dealing with his memories of the departure of his father and the second the relationships of his step father, a successful industrialist, to the historic power of the hereditary privileged classes of India. In the third episode a theft occurs while Rehan is in one of their Indian houses and the chapter explores how Rehan's initial ideas of fair play are eroded by the police's treatment of the suspected servants. In the final Pakistan-based chapter, the event surrounds the blackmail of his half brother.
He explores new wealth/old wealth; servant and class issues; religious conflict; and the impact of capitalism on more traditional cultures.
I confess that I didn't fully share the critical acclaim of Aatish Taseer's "The Temple-Goers" which I found to be too cold and there are still hints of that coolness that really stem from his choice of narrators who are always on the outside of events, but in "Noon" it works much, much better to my eyes. The shorter format of the different events really enforces Taseer's ability to cut through to the key issues while maintaining an entertaining and, at times, amusing tone. He's an interesting and urgent writer and this is well worth checking out.
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful.
Pieces
By Stephen T. Hopkins
I admit to being befuddled by Aatish Taseer's novel, Noon. If the four sections of the book make sense as a whole, I didn't get it. Each on its own seemed finely written and interesting, but my reaction when I finished the whole novel was: "huh?" The character holding together the four pieces is Rehan Tabassum. In the first chapter, he recalls the departure of his father from India to Pakistan. The second involves Rehan's relationship with his stepfather, a wealthy industrialist. The third chapter involves the reaction to a theft and the place of servants in Indian society. The final section is set in Pakistan. Throughout the book, Taseer presents episodes that highlight the contrasts in society. When I finished all the pieces, instead of a whole, I felt left with a recollection of anecdotes and pieces of a whole that left me blank and somewhat confused about what I had read. On the premise that others might see something here that I missed, I offer a mild recommendation for the novel, and suggest sampling an excerpt first.
Rating: Two-star (Mildly Recommended)
Noon: A Novel, by Aatish Taseer PDF
Noon: A Novel, by Aatish Taseer EPub
Noon: A Novel, by Aatish Taseer Doc
Noon: A Novel, by Aatish Taseer iBooks
Noon: A Novel, by Aatish Taseer rtf
Noon: A Novel, by Aatish Taseer Mobipocket
Noon: A Novel, by Aatish Taseer Kindle
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar