book data
146 ratings,
3.43
average rating, 41 reviews
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published
January 2007
by Ecco
(first published 2006)
details
Hardcover, 528 pages
isbn
0060888563
(isbn13: 9780060888565)
description
Set against the brilliantly drawn backdrop of India at the turn of the millennium, The Alchemy of Desire tells the story of a young couple, penniless
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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 208)
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5 stars (22)
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4 stars (51)
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3 stars (49)
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2 stars (16)
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1 star (8)
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avg 3.43
editions: all | this edition
editions: all | this edition
Do you remember Tarun Tejpal? The Editor-in-Chief of the revolutionary newspaper Tehelka? Very recently he has published a novel. The name of the book is The Alchemy of Desire. Last week I bought it from The Starmark on Lord Sinha Road. I would not mind saying that it is a nice fiction inspite of the fact that I have not finished even half of it yet. He sets the mood with the powerful starting line which says Love is not the greatest glue between two people. Sex is. How true! Being a person who ...more
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Read in November, 2009
recommends it for:
those who love to read about much sensuality
This is a very well written book with a steady subject at hand. My main issue is that it is over 500 pages long, of which 200+ pages could've been cut to get us to the point. This book is split up into five sections: Karma, Sathya, Kama, etc. (translated as action, love, money, desire, etc.)
We start with our nameless narrator and his wife, Fizz, at a crux in their marriage after fifteen years. For some reason he just doesn't desire her body anymore as he has constantly for the durati...more
We start with our nameless narrator and his wife, Fizz, at a crux in their marriage after fifteen years. For some reason he just doesn't desire her body anymore as he has constantly for the durati...more
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Read in February, 2010
THE ALCHEMY OF DESIRE is not linear in structure and has several different interleaved strands: the role of sexual attraction in love, the struggles of the emerging writer, the problems of India emerging from traditionalism to modernity. A simple recounting of the plot does the novel a serious injustice. The couple endures genteel but joyful poverty until an unexpected inheritance allows them to purchase a country home in the Himalayas. This house was built by an American adventuress, Catherine,...more
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Read in June, 2007
This book was so beautifully written it was a real work of art. However, the frequency with which the 2 chief protagonists had sex at the beginning of the book got quite wearing as they wouldn't get on with the rest of the story! After they got a bit tired of it as well, things developed nicely. The topic of the woman's university research and how she went about collecting information for it was very entertaining. There are plenty of side plots and deep dark issues to keep most people reading ti...more
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Read in February, 2009
"You do not have to desire for a hundred years or love for a hundred for it to be true. The love of a fleeing moment, the desire of an instant, is as legitimate and true as that of three score and ten years. [...:] The moment you are touched by love or desire you are touched by the divine."
"There is a road for everyone; and a resting place. She must sense her happiness where it came to her; she must take her pleasures where she found them; she must go where her he...more
"There is a road for everyone; and a resting place. She must sense her happiness where it came to her; she must take her pleasures where she found them; she must go where her he...more
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Read in January, 2007
recommends it for:
Readers who still confused about well the objective of life !
This book subtly explains you the vived and almost surreal humna desires and how meeting them serves the greatest purpose of ones' existence.
It also suggests that fulfillment of all desires may not be possible, but constantly thriving to do so may have the key to eternal happiness and bliss!
This is a more detailed review -
Ok, first here is how google defines Alchemy:
"Alchemy is an early protoscientific practice combining elements of chemistry, ph...more
It also suggests that fulfillment of all desires may not be possible, but constantly thriving to do so may have the key to eternal happiness and bliss!
This is a more detailed review -
Ok, first here is how google defines Alchemy:
"Alchemy is an early protoscientific practice combining elements of chemistry, ph...more
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Read in June, 2007
I thought this book had one of the best first pages, EVER. But then it got slow. It falls prey to my personal pet peeve: being way too long. Tejwal seems to think we need a moment by moment update of how the pipal trees are growing in the garden along with everything else. I was impressed with his knowledge of foliage, but also annoyed.
I thought that his language was quite superb - that kind of careful elevated language that is usually reserved for love and higher emotions, not...more
I thought that his language was quite superb - that kind of careful elevated language that is usually reserved for love and higher emotions, not...more
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Read in February, 2007
How does a person fall out of love? What contributes to it? This excellent novel explores just that, telling the story of a should-be novelist and the passionate love-of-his-life. Their desire for each other is overwhelming, all-consuming. It's what keeps them together, the foundation of their love, until, all of a sudden one morning, he wakes up and doesn't want her. Why? That's the story he tells, and it is very interesting. However: this is two books. If you want to crack it open, and I encou...more
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bookshelves:
--id-constructs----race--gender,
a-7-nearly-kinda-reading,
class-relations,
fiction,
g_colonialism,
g_india-and--,
historical,
novel,
politics-learning,
to-read,
war-mltry-conflt-occ
recommended to Claire by:
Authors news site, Tehelka.
Along-the-journey bit:
Near-epic work describing via metaphor and simile and allusion and caricature various aspects of India present and past. Sometimes India-as-character is present in a few sentences within a bigger story, sometimes a whole story illuminates an aspect of India's history (such as the Partition), sometimes the changes in India drive the bigger story (such as CNN's emergence into public awareness). Resplendent India including its sights, sounds, smells, voices, and emotion...more
Near-epic work describing via metaphor and simile and allusion and caricature various aspects of India present and past. Sometimes India-as-character is present in a few sentences within a bigger story, sometimes a whole story illuminates an aspect of India's history (such as the Partition), sometimes the changes in India drive the bigger story (such as CNN's emergence into public awareness). Resplendent India including its sights, sounds, smells, voices, and emotion...more
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Read in April, 2006
I read this book while I was in India, sitting in an ashram, totally at peace with myself (and somewhat bored out of my mind at times), so this whole setting could have potentially skewed my perspective...
Anyway, I ended up reading this monstrous book in just 2 days. I handed it over to my friend and she, also, finished it in 2 days. But we weren't sure if we loved it or hated it. The first couple of pages makes you want to desperately get through the book to find out how someone cou...more
Anyway, I ended up reading this monstrous book in just 2 days. I handed it over to my friend and she, also, finished it in 2 days. But we weren't sure if we loved it or hated it. The first couple of pages makes you want to desperately get through the book to find out how someone cou...more
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Beautifully descriptive novel takes place mainly in India and weaves many themes: love, loss, desire, culture, and history... just to name a few. I was completely drawn into the two main story lines, both present and past. Memorable characters and settings. It gave me a lot to ponder.
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Good read, from lust to love. The sexual description is too good, mixed the indian partition and culture very nicely with the story. The second part where he goes through the biography describes the feeling of love very well.
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Truly one of the most beautiful books I have ever read with perhaps the best opening page ever. Evocative, romantic, erotic. I think I may need to read it again soon.
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Not much what I expected too, many times I had to skip pages which keep on stating same thing again and again. can't say a must read. I will be starting next book from the person, story of my assassin, hope thats better
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Read in September, 2009
The usage of language is simply artistic.
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Read in June, 2008
recommends it for:
No one.
This book ...hmmm, I've read 450 pages in 5 days; yet can't find anything good to say about it. What does that mean? Seems like such a personal fantasy, not that interesting even though it seems like given the topic it should be. All the reviews on the back were great, but these critics were coming from a place as viewing this as an "Indian novel" by and "Indian" writer. I'm just not feeling it. Except I like some of the early descriptions of the house, and the gardens.
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Read in July, 2009
Ok, why is it that I love misogynist literature? I don't get it....
There was something about the unreliable character of the narrator that really got to me here: I didn't like him, but I loved her. ANd in loving her I figured that there had to be something about HIM that I missed. And that made me take a leap of faith, even though I fundamentally disliked and distrusted him....
....and I really want to move to a crumbling cabin in Himachal and write a novel, so there's that...
There was something about the unreliable character of the narrator that really got to me here: I didn't like him, but I loved her. ANd in loving her I figured that there had to be something about HIM that I missed. And that made me take a leap of faith, even though I fundamentally disliked and distrusted him....
....and I really want to move to a crumbling cabin in Himachal and write a novel, so there's that...
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currently-reading (on 9 people's shelves)
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"It was here I learnt that corporate principles and military principles are basically the same. Insulation. Illusion. Hype. Activity." —
1 person liked it
"His copy was full of lofty echoes: Greek Tragedy; Damocle's sword; manna from heaven; the myth of Sisyphus; the last of the Mohicans; hydra-headed and Circe-voiced; experiments with truth; discovery of India; biblical resonance; the lessons of Vedanta; the centre does not hold; the road not taken; the mimic men; for whom the bell tolls; a hundred visions and revisions; the power and the glory; the heart of the matter; the heart of darkness; the agony and the ecstasy; sands of time; riddle of the Sphinx; test of tantalus; murmurs of mortality; Falstaffian figure; Dickensian darkness; ... " —
1 person liked it
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