London Calling
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6 voters
book data
2908 ratings, 3.14 average rating, 421 reviews
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published
June 21st 2004
(first published 2003)
by Scribner
binding
Paperback, 432 pages
setting
Unknown
isbn
0743243315
(isbn13: 9780743243315)
description
Wildly embraced by critics, readers, and contest judges (who put it on the short-list for the 2003 Man Booker Prize), Brick Lane is indeed a ra...more
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avg 3.14
Read in July, 2007
recommends it for:
somebody who wants to read it
Could it take me longer to read a book? I made myself read this book everyday so I could be done with it and properly hate it.
Look at what the NY Review of Books said:
"Ali succeeds brilliantly in presenting the besieged humanity of people living hard, little-known lives on the margins of a rich, self-absorbed society."
WHO IS THIS CRAZY NUT? You need to read a book like Brick Lane to understand "besieged humanity" or what it's like to live a "hard, li...more
Look at what the NY Review of Books said:
"Ali succeeds brilliantly in presenting the besieged humanity of people living hard, little-known lives on the margins of a rich, self-absorbed society."
WHO IS THIS CRAZY NUT? You need to read a book like Brick Lane to understand "besieged humanity" or what it's like to live a "hard, li...more
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bookshelves:
2008,
contemporary-fiction
Read in March, 2008
Nazneen is the eldest of two girls, growing up in a village in Bangladesh. Her younger sister Hasina runs away to marry the young man she is in love with, and not long after that, when she is eighteen, Nazneen is married to a man twenty years older than her and sent to live with him in London.
Her husband, Chanu, is kind and very talkative. They live in a dingy flat on an estate where she makes friends with some other Bangladeshi women. Her world is narrow and small, consisting of the flat an...more
Her husband, Chanu, is kind and very talkative. They live in a dingy flat on an estate where she makes friends with some other Bangladeshi women. Her world is narrow and small, consisting of the flat an...more
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Read in July, 2007
I desperately wanted to like this book. Having lived the immigrant, foreigner, displaced person lifestyle for so long, I wanted this book to capture everything that it means to have lost links with my own personal history in the effort to fit into the culture that's welcomed me into it's monied bosom.
But Nazneen is not me. She's a village girl without education and more importantly, the confidence education brings to a traveller navigating a foreign world.
I snacked with her in the dead ...more
But Nazneen is not me. She's a village girl without education and more importantly, the confidence education brings to a traveller navigating a foreign world.
I snacked with her in the dead ...more
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Read in May, 2008
This book impressed me because of its immersiveness. Not only in terms of time and place, although that was very well handled, but mostly in terms of character. There are few modern human experiences that could be farther from my own than those of a woman born and raised in Bangladesh relocating to London after an arranged marriage to a man already living there. But I found the main character of Brick Lane, Nazneen, to be very relatable, to the point where I ended up totally immersed in her s...more
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bookshelves:
asiandiaspora,
fiction,
herstory,
influential,
tobuy
Read in February, 2008
My favorite quotes from "Brick Lane" by Monica Ali
Amma said to her daughters: "If God wanted us to ask questions, he would have made us men" (53).
"Razia waved the lollipop in front of Raqib's [the toddler's:] face. He watched it devotedly. He became its disciple. For its sake, he would sacrifice everything" (65).
Hasina on corruption in Bangladeshi education: "University is also close down. All students hold protest. They rallying for right to c...more
Amma said to her daughters: "If God wanted us to ask questions, he would have made us men" (53).
"Razia waved the lollipop in front of Raqib's [the toddler's:] face. He watched it devotedly. He became its disciple. For its sake, he would sacrifice everything" (65).
Hasina on corruption in Bangladeshi education: "University is also close down. All students hold protest. They rallying for right to c...more
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Read in January, 2005
I hated this book. I found it impossible to get through and this at a time when I was utterly obsessed with novels based in and around women from India. I couldn't finish it and am continually surprised to see it so favorably reviewed and praised. Usually I'm in agreement about a great book, but this one I just don't share the feelings on.
Although i see that other Good Reads readers felt similiarly, which somehow makes me feel better.
Although i see that other Good Reads readers felt similiarly, which somehow makes me feel better.
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bookshelves:
historical-fiction
Read in January, 2008
This was a pleasure to read. The characters are memorable and the story line superb. It does have a Dickens-like quality not only because the story takes place in London's East End but because the author's words transport you...
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Read in January, 2005
It's a bit draconian to give a book that sells so well only one star, but that's my rating for a book I don't make it through. I read a full third of this book waiting for the protagonist (Nanzeen) to be interesting and it didn't happen. The one highlight was the small window into Bengali/Pakistani culture (before chapter 2 moves to Britain). It's a book about fate and how one acts as a follower in life. And the exceedingly slow learning process Nanzeen goes through when she starts to discov...more
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bookshelves:
book-to-film,
bookclub,
fiction,
immigrant-experience,
indian-pakistani,
islam
Read in January, 2004
Brick Lane is the story of a uneducated woman from a small village in Bangladesh who moves to Brick Lane in London with her new husband after an arranged marriage. Like many other immigrant novels, this book touches on themes of culture clash and the struggle to adapt to the new country. The main character in "Brick Lane" initially feels that it is her fate to be the dutiful wife, living in her husband's shadow. She slowly begins to realize that she can be her own person.
Th...more
Th...more
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Read in December, 2008
I found this to be a beautiful work of fiction. The protagonist, Nazneen, is a Bengali Muslim who is sent to London to marry a man who is trying to make a life for himself. The marriage was arranged and the story basically follows Nazneen's life through all sorts of interesting situations as she struggles to find her place in the world around her. It was colorful and rich in emotional detail. It is chock full of tense moments, moments of despair, but also brilliant moments of hope and love. Beyo...more
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Read in January, 2008
This was a good read that kept me coming back for more, but the ending left me slightly puzzled: I couldn't quite understand the characters' motivations for the paths that they took, and I felt that Nazneem's actions didn't fit the character that had been created until that point. Despite this, I'd recommend this book to all as an engaging read.
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Read in November, 2008
I picked this up because I was talking with some english teachers from my school and realized how woefully ignorant I am of good contemporary fiction. I'd much rather read Dickens or Austen. I got into the story pretty quickly, but toward the middle of the book I just couldn't motivate myself to continue reading. This might have been because I was reading Boomsday by Christopher Buckley at the same time, and it's hard to compete with that for entertainment value. still, I soldiered through with ...more
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Read in November, 2005
Well-told story about interesting circumstances, but didn't you just want to yell at her to grow a pair?
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Read in October, 2008
I read Brick Lane with my book club at work. I was not overly excited about it when it was first presented as it would not be a book I would ordinarily choose on my own. However, I understand that it is part of the idea behind a book club - to read things you might not select yourself, but to try and glean something from it all the same.
Monica Ali has an understated way of writing that weighs less as intriguing but borders more on straight up boring. The story centers around a woman, Na...more
Monica Ali has an understated way of writing that weighs less as intriguing but borders more on straight up boring. The story centers around a woman, Na...more
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bookshelves:
fiction,
indonesian
Read in October, 2008
Pinjaman dari Amang, yg dapat bukunya dari Monic. Setelah dapat wanti-wanti bahwa buku ini bikin bosan karena cuma berkutat pada masalah sehari-hari, saya pun mempersiapkan diri untuk bersabar membaca sampai tuntas. Meski ceritanya memang berpanjang-panjang dan awalnya terkesan membosankan tetapi semakin dibaca semakin penasaran bagaimana akhir kisah ini.
Nazneen, seorang gadis dari pedesaan Bangladesh dijodohkan dengan pria yang usianya dua kali lipat dari dirinya. Ia diboyong ke London, Ing...more
Nazneen, seorang gadis dari pedesaan Bangladesh dijodohkan dengan pria yang usianya dua kali lipat dari dirinya. Ia diboyong ke London, Ing...more
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Read in June, 2008
recommends it for:
Suckers for South Asian fiction in English
Our humble heroine, Nazneen, moves from her childhood rural village in Bangladesh to London for an arranged marriage and learns to love Western-style freedom among the misfits in her predominantly south-Asian housing estate. Or something like that. What makes the book a comfortable companion in the hour before bed is not so much our heroine's emergence into self-actualization (which begins rather late in the book, and feels like it was tacked on so that the author could sell the story to Hollywo...more
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Read in March, 2008
I bought this book at the airport before a transatlantic journey. My enjoyment of this book was rudely interrupted when I reached page 320 only to discover that the 'next' page was 273! A whole section of the book had the wrong pages in it (or, if you prefer, some of the right pages repeated and others missed out!)
When I did manage to get a replacement I had kind of lost my momentum and just wanted to get to the end of the story. Pity, really, because up until that point I had been really enjoy...more
When I did manage to get a replacement I had kind of lost my momentum and just wanted to get to the end of the story. Pity, really, because up until that point I had been really enjoy...more
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Read in August, 2005
In light of the July 7 London bombings I read this book because I wanted to have another perspective into the lives of Muslims in Great Britain. Monica Ali makes a provocative and rewarding leap in her first novel about Nazneen a young Bangladeshi woman who comes to England to marry Chanu, an older man of questionable intelligence. Throughout the book Nazneen comes to terms with her racial, gender and religious identities as a Muslim woman in comtemporary London. One can see the gap between the ...more
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Read in October, 2007
Brick Lane in East London is famous for its market and curries. It was initially the place where immigrants from Bangladesh settled but has become increasingly popular with tourists and Londoners alike who flock there every Sunday in search of a bargain and a good meal. In "Brick Lane", Monica Ali takes one resident and her family and lets us share their days. She ably describes what is going on, recalls reflections from the past and vivid memories from a life that seemed better, and i...more
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bookshelves:
novels
Just read my fellow goodreadin' reviewers and the universal view of this book is that it's terrifically boring both in terms of pace, plot and character, beaten only for tediousness by the Giant Book of Knitwear Adverts which comes with a double cd of Gregorian plain chant. So why did I really enjoy this novel? Must be that I accepted my fate in the same way our heroine accepts hers, and my heart, like hers, fluttered when the slightest thing out of the ordinary happened. Or maybe I'm a Samuel B...more
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