Suburban Sahibs: Three Immigrant Families and Their Passage from India to America
Stock image - cover art may vary
Format: Hardcover
ISBN: 081353318X
ISBN-13: 9780813533186
Publisher: Rutgers University Press
Release Date: November, 2003
Length: 192 Pages
Weight: Unavailable
Dimensions: 8.66 X 5.67 X 0.79 inches
Language: English
   
   

Suburban Sahibs: Three Immigrant Families and Their Passage from India to America

Rate it!  
(Avg. 4.7)
Customer Reviews

Add to Wish List

From
$3.99 Free Shipping
in the USA

List Price: $27.99 Amazon.com
Save $24.00 (86% off)

"As shapely as fiction and as timely as this morning?s newspaper, this book is an informative one to read for pleasure."?New York Times "Suburban Sahibs is a wonderfully crafted story of the personal struggles and victories of three immigrant families from South Asia living in the New Jersey suburbs. Amazingly, what emerges through the prism of ...
Read more
Buy Now Filter by Shipping Prices
Seller Ships From   Condition Copies Price Shipping Qty. Order
Blue Cloud Books AZ Like New 1 $4.22 FREE Add to Cart
Yankee Clipper Books CT Very Good 1 $4.07 FREE Add to Cart
Motor City Books MI Good 1 $3.99 FREE Add to Cart

3 4.7

Customer Reviews

  a multi-generational perspective on immigration

it reads like a novel but you come away actually learning something. by the end of the book, i felt like i had really gotten to know each of the characters, the place they lived and gotten some real insight into a community.
 
  A beautiful and honest look into the immigrant experience.

Kalita evokes a sense of familiarity with the families while taking the reader through a breadth of immigrant experience. The writer tells a story of nonfiction with candor that is at once tender and witty. A must read for anyone with a desire to look through the window into the immigrant experience -- an experience rife with turmoil and triumph.
 
  For residents of Edison and beyond ...

Growing up in Middlesex County in the 1980s and early 1990s, I was always curious about the seemingly sudden and rapid entrance of Patels, Mehtas, and Guptas into my community. Where did they come from? How could they leave their families and their native country? Why did they choose 'here?' Why did 'our' stores on Oak Tree Road close? Kalita's 'Suburban Sahibs' provides that much needed insight with an eloquent and expressive narrative that should be required reading for anyone of any ethnicity living in Middlesex County now or then.