The Namesake
by Jhumpa Lahiripublished
January 2004
(first published 2003)
by Flamingo
edit
binding
Hardcover, 291 pages
isbn
000225901X
(isbn13: 9780002259019)
Sign in to Goodreads to see your friends' reviews of this book.
discuss this book
| topics | replies | views | last activity | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| BFF Book Club: Let's get things started... | 10 | 4 | 3 days ago, 06:43PM | |
| great family novel | 7 | 33 | 04/24/2008 04:48PM | |
| The Chocolate Lov...: Next meeting | 1 | 0 | 06/28/2007 11:24AM |
groups with this book
friend reviews (0)
To see what your friends thought of this book, please sign up.
lists with this book
Where's the love? Add this book to your favorite list.
other reviews (showing 1-20 of 31361)
Read in June, 2008
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Like this review?
yes
(1 person liked it)
add a comment
bookshelves:
fiction,
movie-tie-in
Read in January, 2007
Ashoke dan Ashima Ganguli, pasangang suami istri asal India, datang ke Amerika. Berusaha menggapai mimpi dan harapan tanpa melupakan leluhur dan adat istiadat mereka. Demi rasa hormat mereka pada leluhur merekelah, ketika anak pertama mereka lahir, mereka rela menunda untuk memberi nama pada anak itu. Pemberian nama tertunda karena mereka berdua menunggu surat dari nenek sang Ibu, buyut bayi itu. Surat tak kunjung datang, sementara si bayi tidak bias dibawa pulang tanpa sebuah nama di akte kelah...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
bookshelves:
fiction
Read in June, 2007
recommends it for:
...
I must make two confessions before I delve into a proper review of this book:
1. I saw the movie adaptation of this novel before I read the book.
2. I have read, and loved, Interpreter of Maladies.
As much as I tried to put these two substantial forces out of my mind, they were inevitably the lens through which I understood The Namesake. While I unfortunately began this book knowing the plot, I also knew that Lahiri's prose is among the best I've ever read. Her short stories are nearl...more
1. I saw the movie adaptation of this novel before I read the book.
2. I have read, and loved, Interpreter of Maladies.
As much as I tried to put these two substantial forces out of my mind, they were inevitably the lens through which I understood The Namesake. While I unfortunately began this book knowing the plot, I also knew that Lahiri's prose is among the best I've ever read. Her short stories are nearl...more
Like this review?
yes
(6 people liked it)
2 comments
Read in August, 2007
It would only be fair to mention here that I saw Mira Nair's adaptation of the book before I actually got down to reading this novel recently. Having loved the film, I was keen to see how Lahiri had approached her characters and where its cinematic version stood in comparison.
I'll say two things. First, I feel this is one of the few times when the film more than does justice to the book and second, that the book itself is a deeply involving and affecting experience. In fact, so compassio...more
Like this review?
yes
(4 people liked it)
1 comments
bookshelves:
2008-journey-to-30,
funky-fiction,
i-own-it,
they-made-a-movie
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in October, 2007
You've heard this story before. Junot Diaz, Julia Alvarez, Anzia Yezierska, and Edwidge Danticat are just a few of the authors who have told their own versions. The story they all have in common: The immigrant experience in the United States. Each of the above authors tackles this subject from a different enthnographic perspective, but the pull between the old (native) culture and the new (immigrant) one is always present.
Pulitzer prize winning author Jhumpa Lahiri adds to this conversation ...more
Pulitzer prize winning author Jhumpa Lahiri adds to this conversation ...more
Like this review?
yes
(2 people liked it)
add a comment
Read in March, 2008
Michiko Kakutani begins her review for the New York Times, "Jhumpa Lahiri's quietly dazzling new novel, The Namesake, is that rare thing: an intimate, closely observed family portrait that effortlessly and discreetly unfolds to disclose a capacious social vision."
It's a novel about an immigrant family's imperfect assimilation into America. The story opens in 1968, as Nikhil's pregnant mother is mixing herself a Bengali American concoction of green chili peppers and Planters peanuts...more
It's a novel about an immigrant family's imperfect assimilation into America. The story opens in 1968, as Nikhil's pregnant mother is mixing herself a Bengali American concoction of green chili peppers and Planters peanuts...more
Like this review?
yes
(1 person liked it)
add a comment
bookshelves:
recentlyread
Read in April, 2008
Three-and-a-half stars really. I think Lahiri is a great storyteller, and her writing often transcendent, especially where her characterization is concentrated in a powerful image: the Oxford shoes, symbolizing the arranged marriage Ashima is about to enter into and the move to America it will require, that she innocently, brazenly even, slips her bare feet into in the opening chapter; Ashoke's hand, clutching a torn page of Gogol's "The Overcoat," emerging from the pile of mangled bod...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
recommended to Alicia by:
my book club
recommends it for: someone with ADD maybe
recommends it for: someone with ADD maybe
I know that real authors who write real books are not the same as the people in my writing groups. I understand that real authors can break rules that would drive the average writing group up a wall. Still ... I wished someone, anyone, would have given this book a critical read before it was published and told the author to cut some of the endless exposition. I even wish someone would have used that old trope: "show, don't tell." I hate getting that advice from writing groups, but ...more
Like this review?
yes
(9 people liked it)
2 comments
Read in November, 2007
Sometimes, when you read a story, the author will state the the story is true, but the names and details have been changed to protect the identity of the characters. Well, 'The Namesake' was clearly not a story about my life, but the novel was full of details from my life, all the little things that would have been changed if it was actually my story.
Really, the premise of our stories are similar. Asian parents move to the States and their kids grow up somewhere between the two cultures, not r...more
Really, the premise of our stories are similar. Asian parents move to the States and their kids grow up somewhere between the two cultures, not r...more
Like this review?
yes
(1 person liked it)
add a comment
Has a copy to sell/swap
—
Read in December, 2005
If you want to know how I feel about Lahiri, see my review for Interpreter.
That being said, I agree with a lot of people I've spoken to about this...point being, I prefer her in short story form.
The way this novel is structured is very linear. Pretty straight forward. You see Gogol Ganguli, the protagonist, going from childhood to adulthood. No flashbacks, except for a few, few moments here and there. She also writes this kind of in short story form...meaning, I can kind of tell she's ...more
That being said, I agree with a lot of people I've spoken to about this...point being, I prefer her in short story form.
The way this novel is structured is very linear. Pretty straight forward. You see Gogol Ganguli, the protagonist, going from childhood to adulthood. No flashbacks, except for a few, few moments here and there. She also writes this kind of in short story form...meaning, I can kind of tell she's ...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
bookshelves:
novels
In spite of Lahiri following Gogol / Nikhil all way down to the end, (whom I don’t see very much interesting, neither sympathic nor antipathic), my heart is fully with Ashima: “she who is limited”. Opening chapter with her giving birth, is a brilliant start, as it’s also her new birth in US after another rebirth when she marrys in Culcutta: “her last moments as Ashima Bhadori, before becoming Ashima Ganguli”, (wonderfull description). When ever comes to Ashima, Lahiri is more honest ...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
bookshelves:
readownedloved
I was familiar with, but had not seen, the film "The Namesake" directed by Mira Nair before I had really paid any attention the novel, or was even really aware that there was a novel. Of course I had heard of "Interpreter of Maladies", but still had not read it yet. So, while at the bookstore and picking out a few things to get, I noticed "The Namesake", and remembered people saying the movie was very good, and since I prefer books to movies, when it comes down to...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
I listened to this one on tape and really enjoyed the performance by Sarita Choudhury. I like the way Lahiri shifts tone when she shifts point of view. When we see the story from Ashima's point of view, the tone is restrained, timid, almost veiled. When the point of view shifts to Gogol, the tone becomes more forthright and a little angry. Overall, the book has a refined feeling to it. Even though the characters are trying to make their way in this culture and in this life, they maintain...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
bookshelves:
current-works
Read in June, 2008
recommends it for:
all
This book was an incredible read. From the first word, the exquisite narration draws you into the lives of the characters. It was thought provoking, inviting the reader to examine his/her own sense of identity and how this changes over time often due to circumstances greater than us. The accidents of life are what shape us into who we are.
The Namesake is a tale of conflict between the past and the present, the old world and the new. It gives a clear picture of the concessions that be...more
The Namesake is a tale of conflict between the past and the present, the old world and the new. It gives a clear picture of the concessions that be...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
bookshelves:
fiction,
language-and-culture,
would-recommend
recommends it for: everyone
Read in July, 2008
recommended to Anna by:
my professorrecommends it for: everyone
I really enjoyed this book. I had been meaning to read it for a while but finally decided to give it a shot after my Indian-born professor told me how much she loved it. She said it was beautifully written but admitted that she may be slightly biased because she could relate to so much of the content given her cultural background and dual upbringing in the U.S. and India. I guess it was that statement that made me very curious about this book.
Within the first 30 pages, I was glued. I lik...more
Within the first 30 pages, I was glued. I lik...more



























