Sujata Massey's Blog, page 24

July 7, 2011

An Immigrant's Lot

Reading the Dominique Strauss-Kahn stories in the paper, I am reminded of what I learned about asylum seekers in Chris Cleave's wonderful novel, LITTLE BEE.
It's virtually impossible to get out of one's country to the West without crafting a very dramatic story. In LITTLE BEE, Bee has lost her family and smuggles herself out only to wind up in a detention center where she officially has no story--and has to figure a way into freedom staying true to her ethics. In real life, a woman from Guinea is admitted as an asylum seeker to the US, along with her daughter. In NY she finds work as a hotel maid and in her off time, becomes involved with a drug-selling man who gets caught and sent to an immigrant prison. Because this woman has been accused of telling falsehoods in her asylum seeking story--her rape in Guinea was an "ordinary" one, not a gang rape--and because of the bad boyfriend, the prosecutor in NY doesn't think she deserve to charge DSK with raping her. Question: could it be possible for someone who's been victimized in the past to be victimized again? And if a person was forced to lie in order to ensure her and her child's safe arrival in the US, does that brand her as a terrible person not worthy of the same protection from crime as the rest of us?

If you haven't read LITTLE BEE yet, you must. It will hold you spellbound.
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Published on July 07, 2011 09:28 Tags: dominque-strauss-kahn, immigrant-fiction, little-bee

June 14, 2011

Author signing toss up!

I have a real dilemma this week; two authors I'm extremely interested in have come to visit Minneapolis/St. Paul.

Unfortunately, they are having book signing/reading events on the same night!

LISA SEE will be at the Minneapolis Public Library at 7 this Thursday; she is one of my top five favorite authors and does such amazing work bringing historical settings to life. At the same time at the Edina, MN Barnes & Noble, first-time author KAMALA NAIR is discussing her book which is set in Kerala, India, where I have been several times with my children, who were born there as well. OK, I'm crazy about Indian fiction and Kerala and curious about this new talent; and I'm a many-years fan of Lisa See and would love to learn how she makes old history so breathlessly current.

I wish I could clone myself! Dreams of Joy A Novel by Lisa See Kamala NairThe Girl in the Garden The Girl in the Garden by Kamala Nair
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Published on June 14, 2011 11:14 Tags: kamala-nair, lisa-see