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Latitudes of Longing
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Latitudes of Longing - Faultline, Valley, Snow Desert and Whole Book (Spoilers)
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Hugh
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Mar 16, 2022 04:15AM

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Five days after finishing the book, I am still finding it a little difficult to judge. I admired the ambition and liked a lot of the writing, but some of the caricaturing feels a little lazy, and there is a bit of a Rushdie wannabe element to it.

I thought the first section showed a lot of potential but it lost steam after that. The remaining sections rambled and became increasingly incoherent. She is capable of writing strong prose, but I think she overreached, tried to do too much. Her scope was too broad, too ambitious. It just didn't work well for me.

I would agree that it lost some impetus after the first section. I appreciate it isn’t possible to maintain that bright and playful tone when dealing with political repression and torture, but I found the change too abrupt and it took me a while to reset my expectations and engage with the rest of the book.
I also admired her ambition - the ideas and scope were excellent, but at times I felt it needed to be drawn together more tightly. Really glad to have read this, and would definitely read more from this author in future.

I suppose some readers might be disoriented by the occasional extension into Long Time. First she softens the reader up by coy forays into colonial exploration or the Japanese occupation. Next comes geologic upheavals. Finally (so far) she reaches into solar death. My feeling is that, a) the characters might very well be thinking about those extensions of time, and b) it gives the reader a perspective on the brutality and squalor the characters face.

>>> I have spent many pleasurable hours gazing at maps; "Where does that stream lead?" "What could I see from that point?" "How would I live there?" "What would I think of if I was there?" Ms. Swarup traces one arc through South Asia and shows her readers a selection of human (and other) lives along that arc. Sure it's not War and Peace, but then neither is The Great Gatsby.
>>> I've read two books that introduced me to the northern end of Swarup's arc: Matthissen's The Snow Leopard and it's companion piece, Schaller's Stones of Silence. They show substantially the same world that "Valley" and "Snow Desert" do. Thanks for choosing this title!