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Aerogrammes

and Other Stories

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
From the acclaimed author of Atlas of Unknowns, a bravura collection of short stories—set, by turns, in London, Sierra Leone, and the American Midwest—that captures the yearning and dislocation of young people around the world. • “Funny, deeply tender, and each-and-every-one memorable.” —Nathan Englander, bestselling author of For the Relief of Unbearable Urges

In “Light & Luminous,” a gifted instructor of Indian dance falls victim to the vanity and insecurities that have followed her into middle age. In “The Scriptological Review: A Last Letter from the Editor,” a damaged young man obsessively studies his father’s handwriting in hopes of making sense of his suicide. And in “What to Do with Henry,” a white woman from Ohio takes in the illegitimate child her husband left behind in Sierra Leone, as well as an orphaned chimpanzee who comes to anchor this strange new family. With Aerogrammes, Tania James once again introduces us to a host of delicate, complicated, and beautifully realized characters who find themselves separated from their friends, families, and communities by race, pride, and grief.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from February 6, 2012
      Although most of the characters in these nine immaculately crafted short stories share a common native land—Kerala in southern India—their range of emotions is brilliantly diverse. Yet they all feel adrift in an alien culture, no matter how much time they have spent in the West. James (Atlas of Unknowns) understands the nuances of emotional displacement. In the title story, retired grocer Hari Panicker has a “hollow feeling... sitting in the fading light of a foreign room,” the retirement home where his son has consigned him. James displays a comic bent in “The Scriptological Review,” where a nerdy American teenager, Vijay, mourns his dead father by making his mother’s life miserable with his obsessive focus on producing a journal of handwriting analysis. There is poignancy in Vijay’s deep-seated fear of the culture that drove his father to suicide. In the moving “Light & Luminous” a middle-aged teacher of Indian classical dance is forced to include her ungainly, dark-skinned grandniece in a talent contest, leading her to discover that she shares the girl’s misery. Only the final story, “Girl Marries Ghost,” in which a grieving young American widow enters a lottery to marry a dead man, misses the target that the other stories unerringly hit. Agent: Nicole Aragi, the Aragi Agency.

    • Kirkus

      March 1, 2012
      A well-turned set of stories defined by emotional and physical separation, particularly in the Indian-American diaspora. James' fine debut novel, Atlas of Unknowns (2009), was a continent-hopping tale that tracked the divergent lives of two Indian sisters with wit and a lightly comic touch. Her debut story collection displays a similar approach, and she enthusiastically tests how her style can function in a variety of settings. The two most inventive stories study human emotions in nonhuman contexts. "What to Do With Henry" follows a chimpanzee's travels from Sierra Leone to the United States, where he builds an uncanny bond with a woman and her adopted daughter; as the chimp struggles for his place in a zoo's pecking order, James crafts a clear (but unforced) allegory of our own human strivings. Likewise, the closing "Girl Marries Ghost" imagines a society where people who are desperate for companionship can marry ghosts, who are eager to spend a little time back in the real world; James' portrait of one such marriage is a seriocomic expose of our craving for order set against our inability to let go of our messy pasts. The other stories deal in culture clashes, mostly featuring Indian Americans, but for James ethnicity isn't the sole source of conflict. The Indian dance teacher in "Light & Luminous," for instance, is defined as much by her sense of personal pride as her growing feeling that her art is out of step with the times. In the title story, the protagonist (who has the evocative last name of Panicker) is deciding whether his fellow nursing home residents are more embracing than his family. At every turn, James' prose is crisp, observant and carefully controlled; unlike the narrator of "Escape Key," who grows increasingly aware of his fiction's shortcomings, James projects a deep emotional intelligence.

      COPYRIGHT(2012) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Library Journal

      December 1, 2011

      From the widower who resolves his grief by lovingly burying roadkill to a white woman who takes in her husband's illegitimate child from Sierra Leone and an orphaned chimpanzee, James examines people dealing forthrightly with setbacks. If this collection is as good as her accomplished Atlas of Unknowns, it will be good indeed.

      Copyright 2011 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      March 15, 2012
      Fleeting ties and temporary alliances underscore James' zestful exploration of the elusive connections inherent to most relationships, be they parent-child, husband-wife, or teacher-student. In locations both exotic and banal, each of James' stories precisely delineates the impermanence of such associations while deftly appraising the joy and misery to be found in them. Long-sought-after fame and redemption are bestowed in a distressing way to an Indian wrestler competing for a world championship in the opening story, Lion and Panther in London, while an orphaned girl and a rescued chimpanzee form an unlikely bond as they separately struggle to attain a sense of belonging in the dazzling What To Do with Henry. Brothers bound by physical hardship gingerly cross painful emotional terrain in Escape Key, and a cantankerous, elderly widower discovers forbearance in the title story. Lushly exploring themes of identity and recognition, singularity and community, James crafts taut, complete worlds populated by complex yet recognizable characters who ultimately achieve catharsis and obtain enlightenment, often through unplanned and unconventional methods.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2012, American Library Association.)

    • Library Journal

      January 1, 2012

      A skilled storyteller and author of the well-received Atlas of Unknowns, James investigates with compassion and humor the indignities of aging, disability, and alienation at various stages of life. With a varied cast of insecure, shameful, sometimes obsessed characters, James takes the reader from 1910 London to present-day Sierra Leone, Kentucky, and the Midwest yet keeps her focus firmly on commonalities rather than how people are different. In the heartbreaking "What To Do with Henry," James brings together an orphaned chimpanzee, a retired teacher from Ohio, and a child from Sierra Leone fathered by her husband to form a family of sorts from their individual losses. "Ethnic Ken" is an excruciating story about a preteen who is "too old for dolls" yet is fixated on getting a Ken to go with her Barbie and mortified by her odd but kindly grandfather. The title story is set in a retirement community that has been thoroughly rejected by a newcomer, Mr. Panicker, until he is befriended by an occasionally demented woman and considers his limited alternatives. VERDICT This is a satisfying collection for lovers of short fiction from a refreshingly authentic new voice. [See Prepub Alert, 11/14/11.]--Gwen Vredevoogd, Marymount Univ., Arlington, VA

      Copyright 2012 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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