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The Woman Who Climbed Trees

Autor Smriti Ravindra
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 23 apr 2025
?A stunning chronicle of an Indian woman's coming-of-age... This is electrifying.??Publishers Weekly, starred review
?Is this a ghost story?? Meena asked the barber's wife who told the tale. ?I don't want to hear scary stories one night before I marry.?
?Not all ghost stories are scary,? said the barber's wife, laughing at Meena. ?Besides, we have a long time before us, and stories are little baskets to carry time away in.?
Exquisitely written, a blend of ghost stories, myths, and song, The Woman Who Climbed Trees is a haunting, deeply felt multi-generational story that illuminates the transitional nature of women's lives and the feeling of loss they experience, as they give up one home and family to become part of another.
When she marries a man from Nepal, Meena must leave behind her family and home in India and forge a new identity in a strange place. The Woman Who Climbed Trees follows her, the women who surround her, and the daughter she eventually raises, as they carefully navigate the uncertain tides of their diasporic lives.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780063240490
ISBN-10: 0063240491
Pagini: 368
Dimensiuni: 135 x 203 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: HarperCollins Publishers Inc

Notă biografică

Smriti Ravindra holds an MFA in creative writing from North Carolina State University. As a Fulbright scholar, she studied women's oral storytelling in the Terai region of her native Nepal. Her fiction and journalism have been published in the US and in India. The Woman Who Climbed Trees is her first novel. She currently resides in Mumbai.

Recenzii

"The Woman Who Climbed Trees is a lyrical, furious triumph of a novel, mapping the marital journey of its protagonist, Meena, from girlhood to motherhood, from India to Nepal, from prosaic reality to magical madness. In the tradition of Salman Rushdie and Isabelle Allende, Smriti Ravindra braids epic lore and myth to a narrative of claustrophobic domesticity, earthly damage, and incandescent love."  — Maria Dahvana Headley, New York Times-bestselling author of Beowulf: A New Translation and The Mere Wife