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Paperback Nectar in a Sieve Book

ISBN: 1684220114

ISBN13: 9781684220113

Nectar in a Sieve

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Format: Paperback

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Book Overview

Named Notable Book of 1955 by the American Library Association, this is the very moving story of a peasant woman in a primitive village in India whose whole life was a gallant and persistent battle to... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

One of my favorite books

After reading this book, I felt like I knew Rukimani personally. Her grace, her inner beauty, her happiness and sorrows were a part of my life forever. It was sad to realize that her grace was often a product of having no choices. When she accepts her husband's shocking revelations (don't want to spoil it for you) it's not because she's the most level-headed, forgiving woman on earth - I mean - where is she going to go exactly? She has no choices and in her soul she knows it. Yet she still can find her life a better fate than that of others. There is a scene in which Ruki sells some of her vegetables to a wealthy muslim woman in a burka who has all the material things that Ruki lacks (I do not have the book in front of me I can remember her description of the woman's rings "any one of which would have fed us for a year"). But Ruki is not jealous - she feels sorry for the woman's cloistered existence and the fact that she is not free, cannot walk outside and feel the sun against her skin and work side-by-side with men. It was very interesting. I can envision Ruki buying the dum-dum cart for her grandson. I can picture her grandson in the shade, eyes watering, waiting for a chance to play with the others. I have seen many times the rupee that fell from Irawaddy's sari into the river. I have felt the hopeless struggle that cost her son his tannery job. This book is beautiful, sad, interesting, and moving. I recommend it highly.

Real Taste of India

This is a very short book but don't let that fool you. There is so much packed into this little novel that if you blink you miss something. In some ways it is a very hard read in the fact that it is so realistic. After I read the book, I was shocked to find it out that it was written over 45 years ago. It is so modern and forward thinking that I assumed it had been written in the past year or two. At its core is Rukmani, a peasant Indian girl who marries her husband at age 12. This might shock some but it was a very common practice. This story is a tale of her life, struggles and joys. It is impossible to read this book and forget it.

Beautiful

Nectar in a Sieve, though written almost 50 years ago, remains a classic. The writing is beautiful and lyrical, and the story of Rukmani's hardships is painful and moving. Many readers complained that this book was "too depressing" or "boring." Clearly, they missed out on the essence of the book. Yes, the book is not overburdened in plot, but it is the feelings of Indian life in a rural village, the feelings of a woman facing problems we can't even begin to concieve, the feelings of longing for a better world that make this book so touching. This book should give you an idea of India in the fifties, and the book's slow-moving style reflects that way of life. Don't be put off by others' reviews, my entire class loved this book when reading it for our history course. The book is in parts depressing, but life in India was very depressing, and Nectar doesn't wallow in the depression of the times like it could have, but has an undercurrent of hope for the future, picking up the pieces and moves on. Truly this book is amazing, and gives you the feel of India.

Powerful and unforgettable

I first read this book as a 9th grader in 1971...The book had a powerful hold on my life. I list it as one of the books that have been forever etched in my memory. The struggles of this Indian woman prove the indefatigable spirit that is in each of us no matter our geopgraphy or our cirscumstances. The writing is powerful. The book unforgettable.

A Book to make you Cry

Kamala Markandaya's novel of life in rural India is beautiful, as it is haunting. The story follows the life of a young woman who marries a farmer and lives through the trials and tribulations of a changing India. Enduring poverty, starvation, the death of one child, and the decent into prostitution of another, Rukmani somehow survives, her faith unwavering, her love for her husband and children her rock to hold onto in the days when food is scare and shelter but a mat on a roadside. Kamala's book is not about the tragedy of India; rather it is about the human spirit and how it survives against all odds. If you get a chance to read this book then do, it will probably change your life...
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