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Season Of The Rainbirds (2005)

Season of the Rainbirds (2005)

Book Info

Author
Rating
3.27 of 5 Votes: 5
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ISBN
0571224792 (ISBN13: 9780571224791)
Language
English
Publisher
faber and faber

About book Season Of The Rainbirds (2005)

It had been a while since I had read, “Season of the Rainbirds” by Nadeem Aslam and almost forgotten how much I loved it. I had just finished “The Blind Man’s Garden” and thought of going back to this one. To relive the reading experience and ironically enough I loved it more this time than I had the last time. Every writer’s first novel according to me gives the most insight to the kind of writer he or she will become and I believe in it to a very large extent. The first novel almost shapes the author’s sensibilities and what he or she wants to communicate as a common theme in almost every book thereon. “Season of the Rainbirds” set the benchmark for Nadeem Aslam, where I was concerned. “Season of the Rainbirds” is a book set in a small town in Pakistan, centering on the reappearance of a mysterious sack of letters lost in a train crash nineteen years ago. This is then supposedly said to be connected to Judge Anwar’s death. From there on the story starts and the other characters begin to get embroiled in the plot. The differences in their opinions and lifestyles are evident and that is what makes them so different from each other that the read tends to be juicier. In such kind of a book there are secrets waiting to tumble and Nadeem provides us with just that. He gets into the skin of characters, so much so that in many places of the book you tend to think and more so believe that the characters have come from life, from people that he knew or knows of. The plot seems to be thin in some places, however I ignored that because I was aware that this was his first book and also because I have read more of Aslam to know better. What got me going is Mr. Aslam’s ability to almost turn this to a parallel mystery tale: What is in those letters? Why did they turn up after all these years and how? Only a writer like Nadeem Aslam can know how to propel the story to his intent and engage the reader – both logically and emotionally at every page. To me, that is the power of true writing and to also manage that with a first book says a lot about the writer. I would definitely recommend all his books; however, “Season of the Rainbirds” somehow will always hold a very special place in my heart.

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this is nadeem aslam's first novel and it doesn't have the linguistic dreaminess of his later ones. i enjoyed it but couldn't help a constant comparison with his other work. it's set in a small pakistani town at a time when all hell is breaking loose in the rest of the country. it touches on the changing nature of islam (or maybe the constant tension in islam between common sense and lovingness, and oppression) and on the dirty intrigues of local government. it touches on the delicate play between local government and national government. especially, it touches on how religion can't avoid being in the pocket of power even when it strives not to. it reminded me a lot of Leonardo Sciascia and Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa, who are both geniuses at capturing the large implications of local tyrannies (both writers write about sicily, which tends to be kind of its own country, while being very much part of italy). there are writers who represent local tyrants as caricatures, but aslam, sciascia, and lampedusa appreciate all the smarts, canniness, and skill that go into negotiating positions of local authorities when larger, more powerful authorities loom above. they are cynical, bitter writers, but they are also writers who pay homage to the resilience of the people and the endurance of culture.
—jo

I found this book much more difficult than his other books that I love - especially the brilliant 'Wasted Vigil' that everyone should read! This was his first book i gather, so maybe he was getting into how he wanted to show Pakistan to Western readers. Some of the writing is especially lyrical (I read the introductory chapter to my ESOL learners, several of whom are from Pakistan, and they really enjoyed it) but i found I got very confused between all the characters and kept thinking a lot more time had passed than 1 week. As with all his books, a very interesting look at Islam in operation in a small town, showing the range of different responses to 2 very different Imams, attitudes to people "breaking the rules", explanations as with all religions of the contradictions in holy books, so you can make them "say" almost anything to back up your opinion about good/errant behaviour.
—Anne Tucker

This was Nadeem Aslam's first novel, but I first discovered him when I read (and later ringed) his second novel - Maps for Lost Lovers - which I thought was wonderful. I thoroughly enjoyed this one too.This beautifully written novel centres on the inhabitants of a small town and: the discovery of a sack of letters, missing for 19 years, the murder of Judge Anwar, and an affair between Muslim deputy Commissioner and a young christian woman. These different plot strands are subtely woven together, to create a community under pressure. The small town political and religious tensions are really well observed. Set against the backdrop of a monsoon season, this is an atmospheric novel, that doesn't have any shattering plot twists or very much to "say", it;s the story of a small isolated community in Pakistan, but it is a really excellent novel nontheless.
—Ali

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