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Stock image - cover art may vary
| Format: |
Paperback |
| ISBN: |
0375724370 |
| ISBN-13: |
9780375724374 |
| Publisher: |
Vintage |
| Release Date: |
April, 2001 |
| Length: |
307 Pages |
| Weight: |
Unavailable |
| Dimensions: |
8 X 5.2 X 0.8 inches |
| Language: |
English |
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In his Booker Prize-winning third novel, The English Patient, Michael Ondaatje explored the nature of love and betrayal in wartime. His fourth, Anil's Ghost, is also set during a war, but unlike in World War II, the enemy is difficult to identify in the bloody sectarian upheaval that ripped Sri Lanka apart in the 1980s and '90s. The protagonist... Read more
In his Booker Prize-winning third novel, The English Patient, Michael Ondaatje explored the nature of love and betrayal in wartime. His fourth, Anil's Ghost, is also set during a war, but unlike in World War II, the enemy is difficult to identify in the bloody sectarian upheaval that ripped Sri Lanka apart in the 1980s and '90s. The protagonist, Anil Tissera, a native Sri Lankan, left her homeland at 18 and returns to it 15 years later only as part of an international human rights fact-finding mission. In the intervening years she has become a forensic anthropologist--a career that has landed her in the killing fields of Central America, digging up the victims of Guatemala's dirty war. Now she's come to Sri Lanka on a similar quest. But as she soon learns, there are fundamental differences between her previous assignment and this one: The bodies turn up weekly now. The height of the terror was 'eighty-eight and 'eighty-nine, but of course it was going on long before that. Every side was killing and hiding the evidence. Every side. This is an unofficial war, no one wants to alienate the foreign powers. So it's secret gangs and squads. Not like Central America. The government was not the only one doing the killing. In such a situation, it's difficult to know who to trust. Anil's colleague is one Sarath Diyasena, a Sri Lankan archaeologist whose political affiliations, if any, are murky. Together they uncover evidence of a government-sponsored murder in the shape of a skeleton they nickname Sailor. But as Anil begins her investigation into the events surrounding Sailor's death, she finds herself caught in a web of politics, paranoia, and tragedy. Like its predecessor, the novel explores that territory where the personal and the political intersect in the fulcrum of war. Its style, though, is more straightforward, less densely poetical. While many of Ondaatje's literary trademarks are present--frequent shifts in time, almost hallucinatory imagery, the gradual interweaving of characters' pasts with the present--the prose here is more accessible. This is not to say that the author has forgotten his poetic roots; subtle, evocative images abound. Consider, for example, this description of Anil at the end of the day, standing in a pool of water, "her toes among the white petals, her arms folded as she undressed the day, removing layers of events and incidents so they would no longer be within her." In Anil's Ghost Michael Ondaatje has crafted both a brutal examination of internecine warfare and an enduring meditation on identity, loyalty, and the unbreakable hold the past exerts over the present. --Alix Wilber Read less
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No Dustjacket
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Ex-Library Copy
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5
5
Customer Reviews
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Posted by Richard R Ronald on 05/27/2000 |
Many have said they are disappointed with the book, but have hinted the writing is far subtler than in earlier books. That's exactly it. While there are a few pages of less-than-stellar prose (for a 300-page book, it is extremely tight), Ondaatje has pulled off some amazing things here. Foremost is his ability to link the landscape with the human. From diamond and plumbago mines to the ruins of palaces to the inscription filled caves that once housed ascetic monks, the author lets the geography and conflict of Sri Lanka reveal the geography and conflict of being. And just as the characters hoard individual inscriptions (Warning: WHEN IT RAINS, THESE STEPS ARE BEAUTIFUL or more brutually "In diagnosing a vascular injury, a high index of suspicion is necesary."), you'll come across sentences, paragraphs, pages you'll want to commit to memory. Finally, the experience of discovery, the delving and decryption involved in reading the book is so, well, lovingly mirrored in the character's investigations (of self, memory, identity) that you read with the sense that you are doing something important, that you are ferreting out a deep and wonderful secret about the human experience. That you, like the artists and doctors in the story, are revealing pain only to heal it, figuring the dead only to honor and remember them. Read, I implore you, this wonderful, horrible, beautiful book.
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Posted by greglor on 05/15/2000 |
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This is a really great book. However, those looking for a repeat of The English Patient may be disappointed. While the writing style is very similar (Ondaatje's poetic descriptions) the organization is much clearer and easier to follow. It isn't until 2/3 of the way into the book that he begins to mix events around. But it works! The characters are as fascinating as those we know from The English Patient, but the plot is far more interesting, and his descriptions near sublime. This book is poetic, disturbing and uplifting all at the same time. One can imagine that this is a topic that is closer to the heart of the author, but no matter what, it comes through as a thoughtful, inspired work of art.
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Fascinating Story of an Island |
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Posted by Sunil Govinnage on 05/07/2000 |
In his latest novel, 'Anil's Ghost' Ondaatje takes us back to his native Island Sri Lanka, through a labyrinth of a journey full of imagination, creativity and originality. Although Ondaatje brings several characters whose lives are engulfed with a bloody civil war and its aftermath he does not provide any political solutions. His ability to examine the pasts with the present provides sufficient insights into the complexities of characters he has wonderfully portrayed in this excellent novel rich with Ondaatje's special prose full of metaphors and images. The most striking feature of this novel is how Ondaatje has combined the history, art, archaeology, folklore of this fascinating country which is at a cross-road today. Anyone who has some interest in Sri Lanka or anyone who had links with this lost paradise must read this novel to understand the complexities of a civil war and above all to appreciate the original work of a great writer. In summary, Ondaatje tells us a fascinating story of an island where.." the darkest Greek tragedies ..[are] innocent compared with what is happening..." there.
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The first classic of the 21st century? |
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05/02/2000 |
Thankfully, after the success of The English Patient, Michael Ondaatje did not feel the pressure to 'sell-out' or 'dumb-down' and spent 7 years carefully (and I mean CAREFULLY) crafting a very Ondaatje book - a poetic and gentle journey through the human experience. Under the shell of a dramatic story of war-crimes and governement cover-ups, Ondaatje tells us far more about human relationships and feelings of alienation. The book is full of metaphor and symbols but it is Ondaatje's slight of hand which allows it to sink in without being obvious. And all along there are the wonderfully imaginative and original scenes that few writers are able to come up with, cinematic-like moments that are never forgotten. Ondaatje has a truly original and distinctive voice and like seeing an old friend after a long absence the publication of Anil's Ghost is a wonderful reward for the long wait. A truly great and timeless book which will forever be considered one of the great modern novels.
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A tremendous poetic novel |
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Posted by Ronald I. Miller on 01/04/2001 |
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Although there are many reviews of "Anil's Ghost" already posted, I felt compelled to write another on the grounds that many reviewers appear to have not fully appreciated Ondaatje's goals in this book. I share the opinion of some of the other readers, that this is Ondaatje's best work to date. In my case I'll go farther and say this is the best novel I've read in several years. Some people seem to be finding the book dull, and it is certainly not standard best-seller fare. It is subtle, allusive, and not driven by plot. Although it concerns the civil war in Sri Lanka, it is not *about* it. Although it concerns the search of a forensic anthropologist for the origin of a possibly-murdered skeleton it is not about that either. Readers who approach the novel as mystery are bound for disappointment, because this is not a novel of revelation, but one of concealment. It would perhaps be best to consider "Anil's Ghost" as a poetic meditation on the nature and search for truth. As it examines truth from many angles, it comes to no pat conclusions, which may also be troubling for some readers. Instead it uses the compelling characters and dramatic structure to illustrate the complexity of truth, while not absolving us of the duty of searching for it. The specific setting is necessary for the development of the themes, which are, nonetheless, universal. The prose is perhaps not as intensely beautiful as that of "The English Patient," but that is appropriate for the subject matter. Ondaatje has written a story of torture and murder which is neither thoroughly dark, nor simplistically heroic. Instead he gives us a multilayered truth in which the deepest darkness still allows a space for hope. It is a subtle, brilliant, stunning book.
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