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Paperback Bringing Tony Home Book

ISBN: 1556437579

ISBN13: 9781556437571

Bringing Tony Home

Set in the 1940s and 1960s, Bringing Tony Home is a masterful modern example of a timeless genre, the bildungsroman. In the title novella, a boy returns to his old home to find Tony, his beloved dog... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Recommended

Format: Paperback

Condition: New

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Customer Reviews

4 ratings

Beautifully written...

I survived the reading of this book only because I needed to know what the narrator felt at the end of his journey to his past. Only 224 pages long, constant attention was essential to capture the nuances of the Sri Lankan culture, remember the times frames, and yet at times, lay the book to rest, exhausted by its words. The interrelated stories offer vivid, though somewhat streaming descriptions of landscapes interlaced with family, friends, enemies, and begin with his dog Tony. As his family descends from the stature that wealth in this culture brings, the narrator experiences his first bitter taste of loss: his dog Tony. It was difficult to read of his extreme efforts to regain his dog, only to realize, memories attached to Tony would no longer grow pleasantly in his new environment, so he releases the dog to his own destiny. Each story offers a glimpse not only of his memories, but also his reaction to the differences that have transpired since he last travelled from the present to the past. Beautifully written and embellished with personal ambiance, this author has demonstrated a highly emotional level of style in his remembrance of one man's journey to revisit his childhood.

Highly recommended reading for fans of short fiction

Life has a strange habit of throwing curve balls. "Bringing Tony Home" is a collection of short stories from Tissa Abeysekara, who provokes the strange coincidences of life. Winning many awards, the stories range from lost dogs, rediscovering past flames, parents, ancestry, and more. Using the written word as a beautiful paintbrush, "Bringing Tony Home" is unique and highly recommended reading for fans of short fiction.

Evocative, Sensual, Moving

By way of full disclosure, I was the acquisition and developmental editor of this collection, so this review is in no way "objective." Tissa is a film maker of some renown in Sri Lanka; Sinhalese by birth, but a writer who adopted English as his "mother tongue" early in his writing career. He's the producer, director, and/or script writer of dozens of films and television shows, and the recipient of numerous awards in his country. What drew me to Tissa stories was his use of language--long, flowing, sensual sentences and challenging syntax that combine to create an undeniable feel for the trails and people of his youth. The setting is 1940s and 1950 Sri Lanka. At its heart, this is a collection of stories by a man, written in his later years, who is trying to make sense of his life through the retelling of these stories. A young boy loves a dog, loses him, then risks his life by walking miles to find him again, only to once again lose him, this time forever. And in the retelling years later he realizes that it was much more than the dog that he had both found, and lost ("Bringing Tony Home"). That same young boy, a few years later, finds "forbidden love" in the form of an outcast girl, only to have her tragic story unexpectedly come back to him decades later ("Elsewhere: Something Like a Love Story"). In the story that has brought tears to my eye in every reading, "Hark, The Moaning Pond: A Grandmother's Tale," the narrator recounts his relationship with his grandmother -- a story the like of which that's been told a million times -- only under Tissa's spell, it quickly leaves the realm of a typical grandmother's tale and opens its wings into the mythology of Sri Lanka itself. As I said, I'm not objective. "Hark" was one of the most moving experiences I've had in my reading life. When experienced as a whole, BRINGING TONY HOME is a beautiful, beautiful read, evoking in cinematic detail a time and place lost to everything but memory, and literature.

A Rewarding Read

Bringing Tony Home by Tissa Abeysekara is a collection of four interrelated stories set in Sri Lanka. Each story may be read and enjoyed individually, but read together they provide a broader perspective and deeper understanding of the main character, who narrates the stories. The narrator recounts key periods in his life - his life as a child, as a young adult, and as a man. His stories recall memories of family, loss, and growing up; events that influenced the person he would become. By recalling these memories and examining them to try and separate things real and imagined, the narrator begins to understand himself better. He learns that images from memory are often illusory and constantly changing and yet, no matter how difficult they are to pin down, something true and meaningful can be culled from them. Although I would not have said so after the first several pages, Bringing Tony Home is a richly engaging book. I was initially distracted by so much description of the setting in the first story, and got a bit lost along the Old Road, High Level Road, gravel path, cart track, thick leafy veralu trees, and elbow bends, etc. But the disorientation was short-lived and I was rewarded with a highly original story that I won't soon forget. Because the book contains four stories, it seems natural to choose a favorite. I have two: Elsewhere: Something Like a Love Story and Hark, the Moaning Pond: A Grandmother's Tale. These are the last two stories in the book. Please don't short-change yourself, though. You will want to read the book cover to cover
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