Product Details
Tamarind Woman (Ballantine Reader's Circle)

Tamarind Woman (Ballantine Reader's Circle)
By Anita Rau Badami

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Product Description

Growing up in India, Kamini often found herself struggling to be noticed: noticed by her beloved, storytelling father, whose position as a railway officer took him away from home for long stretches of time; and noticed by her distant, distracted mother, Saroja, whose biting remarks earned her the nickname Tamarind Woman—and whose frequent disappearances while her husband was away led to whispers of dalliances and affairs.

Now Kamini is grown, living in Canada in a sort of self-imposed exile from her eccentric family and all the turmoil they represent. After her father’s death, her mother embarks upon a solo journey across India by train— because what is the use of a lifetime railway pass if she doesn’t use it? The trip brings the past rushing back for Saroja and Kamini—as both are forced to confront their dreams, disappointments, and long-guarded secrets.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #715848 in Books
  • Published on: 2004-03-02
  • Released on: 2004-03-02
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 304 pages

Editorial Reviews

From Library Journal
Originally published in India in 1996, this first novel is Badami's second to appear in the United States, after The Hero's Walk (LJ 3/15/01). Here she relates the story of Saroja, as told by her daughter Kamini and by Saroja herself. Kamini's memories are triggered when she learns of her mother's plan to journey across India without itinerary. Kamini's inability to contact her mother while she travels mirrors her childhood feelings of neglect and abandonment. In embarking on her travels, Saroja not only defies the narrow expectations of her parents, who pushed her into a loveless marriage and ended her ambitions, but she also breaks away from the expectations of her daughter. Although set primarily in India, this portrait of a mother and daughter transcends geographical limitations. And though the book bears some similarities to Amy Tan's The Bonesetter's Daughter (LJ 1/01), Badami provides no tidy resolutions to intergenerational and intercultural conflicts. Mother and daughter begin and end their stories alone. This thoughtful work is recommended for all public and academic fiction collections. Rebecca Stuhr, Grinnell Coll. Libs., IA
Copyright 2001 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist
Badami's second novel explores the relationship of a mother and daughter, Saroja and Kamini. In the first half, Kamini comes of age among postcolonial India's railway colonies. Her father is often away, charting new frontiers for railway expansion, and she is left home with her mother and sister. She eventually leaves for Canada, where she remains wistful for the smells and sounds of India. Kamini worries when her mother suddenly departs for a trip across India, with only postcards marking her whereabouts. Saroja then speaks, telling her story of longing for a life independent of the demands of a husband and family. She recounts her loveless marriage and thwarted attempts to become a doctor, her often vicious commentaries earning her the nickname Tamarind Mem, after the sour fruit that grows in her backyard. Badami's brilliant and beautiful novel captures life in India--the musicality of the English spoken, the interactions with servants, the smells of rotting fruit in the market, the sweltering sun, and the constant moving about of a railway family. Michael Spinella
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Review
?Splendidly evocative . . . As much a book about the universal habit of storytelling as it is about the misunderstandings that arise between a mother and daughter.?
?The Washington Post Book World

?A TREMENDOUS ACHIEVEMENT?a skillful and compassionate family saga that is personal, intimate, tender, and revealing.?
?Toronto Globe & Mail

?TAMARIND WOMAN ALLOWS THE READER TO TRAVEL INSIDE AN INDIA RARELY REVEALED. Ms. Badami?s detailed descriptions of social customs and events are as enriching as they are beautiful.?
?Richmond Times-Dispatch

?COMPELLING . . . Dishing out often laugh out-loud funny dialogue, [Badami] finds a wicked absurdity in the traditions of India, though the comedy masks larger, more persuasive social conflicts.?
?Salon.com

?BITTERSWEET . . . With often stunning, poetic prose, [Badami] gives us an intimate character study of two women.?
?Minneapolis Star Tribune

?Warm, witty, and engaging . . . [with] a slightly whimsical edge . . . There are some wonderfully evocative descriptions of childhood fears and superstitions. . . . The characterization and portrayal of complex family dynamics are also extremely well done.?
?The Observer (England)

?One is beguiled by this evocative recreation of Kamini?s childhood. . . . The texture of the book is like a finely woven piece of cloth, where every fragment of memory, however ordinary, is given a motif. . . . Badami possesses great facility with the language and she uses it with a malleable elegance that is a pleasure to read. Her recall of detail and the ability to blend it into characters is remarkable.?
?Biblio (India)

?Exquisite . . . This is a literal swirl of a piece that should be gulped whole in one sitting. . . . Stunning, rich in detail, and utterly beguiling.?
?The Edmonton Journal (Canada)

?A strong, emotional mother-daughter story . . . Family relationships and the appeal of a distant time and foreign culture combine to give this novel appeal for readers who like settings they deem exotic as well as those who just like a good story.?
?Baton Rouge Advocate

?So hilarious that those around me asked why I was laughing . . . In Badami?s story, love is woven throughout the story?s tapestry like golden thread.?
?Voice of Asia

?A family tableau . . . with vivid language and intricate descriptions.?
?Elle

?VERY ACCOMPLISHED . . . QUIETLY SATISFYING . . .
[The details] are conveyed with enjoyable precision, and a picture of post-colonial India is vividly conjured up through a series of vignettes of places and people.?
?The Times (London)

?A book so unselfconscious it begs to be read aloud . . . Badami allows her characters to float their stories on the air in a first-person narrative as jewel-bright and weightless as a silk sari shaken out of its folds. . . . Badami?s gorgeous language is as rich and sharp and surprising as are her insights. Tamarind Woman is a treat.?
?The Ottawa Citizen

?This lovely novel is layered with voices telling stories. . . . Badami writes very well and her narrative is rich with details. . . . She chronicles the intimate details of women, struggling in the constraints and judgments of a culture that dictates their duties and the shapes of their lives.?
?Santa Barbara News Press

?Tamarind Woman presents a vivid history of women between India and America, told in the form of an entertaining novel.?
?Winston-Salem Journal

?I enjoyed it enormously. . . . A captivating writer, with a sharp sense of character and a humor that infuses the story with vitality.?
?HELEN DUNMORE

?[A] dense weave of fascinating details of everyday life in a culture unfamiliar to the American reader.?
?Chapel Hill News

?ENGAGING . . . [ITS] PAGES GLOW
WITH LOVING NOSTALGIA FOR THE OLD COUNTRY.?
?The Times Literary Supplement

?Badami weaves a tale of bittersweet nostalgia . . . imbuing her descriptions of Indian domestic life with achingly palpable details as she explores all the small ceremonies that make family life so simultaneously rich and infuriating. . . . A delectable book, filled with pungent sights and sounds and poignant memories. It proves, yet again, that each person in a family experiences that microcosm differently. Only by synthesizing these disparate views do we grasp the full flavor of events.?
?Quill & Quire

?[A] novel that reveals so much talent . . . Badami writes graceful, evocative prose and plays complex variations on her themes. All her characters are vibrant and deftly drawn, and her narrators? opposing points of view create a poignant irony.?
?Publishers Weekly

?Badami?s brilliant and beautiful novel captures life in India?the musicality of the English spoken, the interactions with servants, the smells of rotting fruit in the market, the sweltering sun, and the constant moving about of a railway family.?
?Booklist

?This is a beautiful first novel, written in lively Indian English. And, in the tradition of Indian writing, all-too-human flaws are described with endearing humor.?
?The Georgia Straight

?Poignant . . . A light, delicate prose . . . It?s a remarkable exposition of the truth that we never ever really know anyone, even with those closest to us.?
?The Herald (Glasgow)

?[A] VIVID, ALMOST CINEMATIC TALE . . .
Sight, sound, and, especially, smell inhabit the narrative with the force of character. . . . By telling the story of a bitter woman so eloquently, Badami offers a measure of sweet redemption.?
?Maclean?s

?This novel is a beauty. . . . Simply written, unpretentious, Tamarind Woman weaves a web around you as all good stories do and clasps you in its embrace. Anita Rau Badami has written a fine book with sensitivity. . . . An absolute delight to read, Tamarind Woman puts to rest the rhyme that girls were made of sugar and spice and all things nice. How delightful and refreshing that Saraja is made of tamarind and chilies and fierce black pepper.?
?The Hindu

?In a masterly fashion, Anita Rau Badami spins her web of memory. . . . It is a fascinating book that shows how an expatriate can reconstruct her imaginary homelands with magnificent detail. . . . Tamarind Woman will help Anita Rau Badami establish herself as a post-colonial writer who is able to assert and foreground her Indian experience in a powerful way.?
?The Pioneer (India)

?Introspective, with rich descriptions of Indian middle class life, Tamarind Woman is a compelling novel that will win even more admirers for this young, talented writer.?
?Register-Pajaronian (Watsonvile, CA)

?What a treat . . . An escape, an entertainment?that mere but elusive thing that most of us, after all, are seeking in good fiction.?
?National Post

?[A] thoughtful work . . . This portrait of a mother and daughter transcends geographical limitations.?
?Library Journal

?A POWERFUL STORY . . . A RICHLY TEXTURED WORK.?
?Books in Canada

?The customs of two very different worlds are revealed in minute detail throughout Anita Rau Badami?s arresting novel. . . . While this tantalizing book is filled with glimpses of life in a country whose sights and sounds are exotic to an outsider, its central theme is the mother-daughter relationship that transcends geographical boundaries. Badami writes elegant, complex prose. . . . Her provocative thoughts fill the pages of Tamarind Woman, leaving the reader entranced. . . . This thoughtful novel leaves one with much to ponder, particularly the fragile family ties that refuse to be severed.?
?The Sanford Herald (NC)

?A forceful narrative . . . Colorfully retold myths [are] spun from the mouths of various personalities . . . This layered novel?s suggestive world seeps smoothly into your consciousness.?
?Winnipeg Free Press

?A warm, engaging portrait of exile, geographical and spiritual . . . Memories run like silk being spun, starting out simple and crafted differently by each individual in this subtle story of family dynamics.?
?The Scotsman

?An intimate and tender novel evocative of India, its myths, superstitions, and religion. It also explores the mutability of memory, unraveling the deep ties of love and resentment that bind mothers and daughters everywhere.?
?Paisley Daily Express (England)

?Beautifully crafted . . . Although rooted in the caste system of India, this accomplished work transcends cultural and linguistic barriers.?
?Yorkshire Post (England)
-- Review


Customer Reviews

Wonderful insight into Indian experiences5
I must confess that I didn't buy it at Amazon - I picked it up at a local [book] store that highlighted a set of new authors.

And as I started reading the book at their store, I just couldn't stop it....It was absolutely riveting....I had finished more than half of the book, before I realized that they were going to close the store in 10 minutes or so !!

This book is an absolute page-turner, if you are from India....The attention to small small details, from an Indian childhood are just amazing.

For instance, the author talks about the frequent transfers that many families of banks/railways/govt officers have....and all the accompanying problems of being a child in desh - frequent fights between parents, too much emphasis on God & religion, awkward circumstances of even getting an oil bath.....

This author has a remarkable memory and wraps it around the basic story of the daughter (in Canada) walking down her memory lane....at the same time, the mother (in Madras) has an entirely different view of the same circumstances !! (which you realize after completing the book.....)

Anyways, I would rate it as a must-buy, if you are an desi immigrant to North America....check it out.... and you realize that an author like Anita can package all your desh experiences in one nice book. (it also gave me a new insight of taking that package and stop worrying about all the awkward things of childhood....can press the delete button on the package!!)

Regards,

A wonderful trip to a far away place4
I was sad to finish Tamarind Woman. It was that good. What struck me the most about this book is how alike we all are, even if we're from different parts of the world.

The author skillfully weaves the present and different versions of the past together. Aunty Vijaya from the book remarks that memories are never the same between two people--"They are pictures we create in our hearts you see...and each of us uses different sticks of chalk to colour them." The dialogue is excellent. The characters and relationships are varied and interesting. The descriptions are vivid--"...the tree was covered in blossoms, fiery with colour sucked from the sun."

As I was skimming the book to include a couple of my favorite sentences in this review, I caught myself re-reading it! I had to make myself stop. I'll recommend Tamarind Woman to my mother-in-law and sister-in-law, and I'm going to add Badami's second book The Hero's Walk to my wish list right now. If you enjoy learning about other cultures or if you're just interested in human relationships, you'll enjoy this book.

Poignant flavours of family5
This book pulls at my heart in ways that few collections of words ever have. There are chords struck that resonate in my family recollections with a clarity and truth that strikes me dumb, were it not for the envigorating sense of recognition that she has felt the same forces as I, and articulated them wonderfully. There is a poignance that exceeds mere reminiscence, that's what happens when one recognises a similar feeling occurring in another person. Thanks to Anita Rau Badami for putting it all down in words so beautifully!