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Lynn Austin's new book does not disappoint
By Deb · 1 post · 9 views
By Deb · 1 post · 9 views
last updated Nov 22, 2016 07:37AM
What Members Thought

I would have sworn I was listening to a novel as I followed the saga of Abdul, a “trash-picker”, and his neighbors–all of whom live in Annawadi, a slum that sits right next to the airport in Mumbai, India. But there really is an Abdul, and there really was a one-legged woman named Fatima that lived next door to him. The bare facts of their life stories–a conflict that leads to a fiery death and an unjust imprisonment–are compelling enough. But the way the story is told–with vivid descriptions of
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May 17, 2013
Cheshire Public Library
rated it
it was amazing
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review of another edition
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Here is a book so hauntingly beautiful, I had to go back and double-check to make sure it was non-fiction, because I swore someone had snuck a piece of fiction into my reading list.
From the first line, Behind the Beautiful Forevers reads like a good novel, with lyrical prose that wrings beauty from even the most miserable situations. You are introduced to Abdul, a fairly well-off industrious teen who may be around sixteen years, or maybe nineteen; no one is sure. When a crippled neighbor gets an ...more
From the first line, Behind the Beautiful Forevers reads like a good novel, with lyrical prose that wrings beauty from even the most miserable situations. You are introduced to Abdul, a fairly well-off industrious teen who may be around sixteen years, or maybe nineteen; no one is sure. When a crippled neighbor gets an ...more

So many mixed feelings about this book. It is stated on the cover to be about hope, yet I don't see much hope in these story. Finding out the people were real made me like this a bit more. This is not a life I would want to live and yet this is the life they choose. I did find it interesting to see how the views were changing from the parents to the children in less than a 15 year time frame. This book is recommend by: Bill Gates, John Green, Junot Diaz, and Oprah Winfrey.
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Nov 06, 2011
Jenee Rager
rated it
liked it
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review of another edition
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This book was definitely well written and well researched. However I found the ending to be terrible as I was really hoping Abdul would get his not-guilty verdict as well. I would love to read a sequel ten years or so down the road and find out what happened to the Hussein family, Asha, and all the other main characters.
