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Hardcover Something to Tell You Book

ISBN: 1416572104

ISBN13: 9781416572107

Something to Tell You

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Book Overview

The stunningly original, iconoclastic, award-winning author of The Buddha of Suburbia returns with an exhuberant novel about a psychoanalyst on the search for forgiveness and fulfillment. In the early... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

I began: hallucinations, panic attacks, inexplicable furies, frantic passions and dreams

It took me a while to discover the key to this novel. At first I considered that it may have been a sort of stream of conciousness type of book where the narrator jumped from important topic to important topic but then I realised that this was not the case. Neither did the time frame nor the timeline make a whole lot of sense particularly so when there were spatial jumps also. In many ways this can be an infuriating book, one minute we read of dispassionate things in a clinical sense then there is seeming contradiction when matters of emotive significance are involved. But, what this book does is to put the reader in the role of analyst. Our patient is visiting on an imaginary couch and pouting out his soul. Within this context it becomes clear. We are not communicating directly with our patient, we are his confessor. His intimacies, his indiscretions, his actions are laid bare for us to see and share in. We cannot tell anyone else because of our professional ethics and we are therefore his accomplices in crime. It is a funny position for us to hold but this, for me, is the ultimate briliance of Kureshi's production. We do not need to know about how this car works, we just need to know that it works and waht noises the engine makes. We become aware of the people that the patient cares and loves and respects through his descriptions and relationships and this book serves to illustrate that each individual's perspective is not a true picture of other people. From this point of view the people that he describes are only pale imitations of their own, rich, real selves, they are more one dimensional caricatures than people. I could go on but the joy of this book is the struggle with the content, persistence, and then the ultimate realisation of the journey. I would have no hesitation in recommending it.

Coming of Age at Any Age

What makes this book so special is that our hero thought he'd come of age in the 80's, but had to reach the present day to fully realize his maturity. Kureish's proficiency in language honed through his wonderful screenplays is evident in dialogue that jumps off the page, including the observations by Jamal, the narrator, some of which are hilariously funny. (e.g., "There are few people who when they are old wish they'd led a more virtuous life; most people wish they'd sinned more; they also wish they'd taken better care of their teeth.) So many characters are so vividly portrayed making this one of those books that you hope to find a sequel several years down the road, to find out what happened to these people and how their lives continued to evolve. Not only Jamal, the central character, comes of age, but all those around him, even his own son who deserves a storyline all his own. Not to mention his sister, Miriam, who, although I'm glad we don't live next door to each other, I would welcome as a friend.

"Alas to the surprise of many, psychoanalysis doesn't people behave better, nor does it make them mo

As a fan of Hanif Kureishi, I was delighted to see that he had written a new novel, Something to Tell You. While I often don't particularly like the characters Kureishi creates (I would find their lives too messy to deal with in 'real life'), they are always the sort of people I want to read about--bright, interesting, entertaining and troubled. And in Something to Tell You, once again, Kureishi delivers a wonderful tale with his usual worldly wisdom. If you enjoyed The Buddha of Suburbia, then chances are you will enjoy the marvelous Something To Tell You, for in some ways these two novels complement each other. The narrator of Something to Tell You is Jamal Kahn a London-based, middle-aged Anglo-Indian psychoanalyst. Divorced and with a busy practice, Jamal spends his days listening to his patients' many problems, and even Jamal's relatives, friends and acquaintances feel free to bend Jamal's ear at any time of the day or night. Jamal, who spends his life listening to others, tells his story to the reader, reaching back into his past while exploring the nature of desire, guilt, and loss. Kureishi's characters are mainly middle-aged Londoners, coming to terms with aging and death, juggling those realities against the time left. While the renewal of desire and desirability is a huge issue for some of the characters, Jamal struggles with the ghosts of his past and long cherished dreams of what could have been. Jamal's life is full of colourful characters--Jamal's mother has "discharged her duty and gone AWOL," and Jamal's exotic sister, Miriam and her lover, theater and film director Henry embark on an odyssey of the London sex club scene, much to the dismay of Henry's daughter. The fact that Henry is also Jamal's best friend complicates matters even further, and Jamal is expected to 'save' Henry from Miriam's corrupting clutches. But Jamal has problems of his own. His ex-wife Josephine and son, Rafi are steadily moving out of Jamal's life into new lives of their own. When the novel begins, Jamal's life is fairly sterile and uncomplicated, but as the story develops, he becomes increasingly mired in the relationships of his family and friends. Plus Jamal's past--incidents he'd much rather leave buried--float to the surface and cannot be avoided. I loved this novel. Kureishi's amazing insight into human relationships seeps through on every page, and he's an experienced enough author to veer away from the trap of making the therapist/narrator the person who has all the answers. Jamal may be a therapist, but he's just as troubled as everyone else. The difference with Jamal, however, is that his problems are largely buried, so his life appears, at least on the surface, to be in control. The madness and mayhem of Miriam's chaotic household with her cabbie partner-in crime, Bushy, a dealer in contraband, is in complete contrast to Jamal's ordered existence. Jamal has a time and a place for passion, but unlike his sister, it's compartmentalized, tuc

Kureishi matures and his subjects with him...

With "Something To Tell You" Hanif Kureishi returns to the soul-searching of the British citizen of mixed, Pakistani-English, descent. While "The Buddha of Suburbia" tackled the problems of adolescence in an immigrant environment in the 1970s, here the main character, Jamal Khan, is a middle-aged, middle-class man who reveals his deepest secrets. Jamal is a successful psychoanalyst, struggling with his relationships, his desires and his past. The narrative is in form of his monologue, interchanging between present and memories, starting in Jamal's childhood. Jamal provides background information about other main characters: his rebel sister, Miriam, his film director friend, Henry, his friends from college times - Val and Wolf, his soon-to-be ex-wife, Josephine, and his son, Rafi, and, most importantly, on his first love, Ajita, who haunts him and is a reason for his introspective. Ajita, a beautiful, but pained daughter of an Indian factory owner, reveals to Jamal her most intimate secrets - and after his intervention disappears from his life. Since then, Jamal dreams of meeting her again, at the same time dreading the thought of the encounter. Kureishi's prose, although fresh and original, is dense, full of meaning, requiring attention - skimming through some paragraphs can result in losing track and getting discouraged. There are also sometimes sudden jumps of narrative changing focus from one paragraph to another, anchoring on one word, which leads to the reminiscences connected with it; his memories flow exactly like a monologue at the shrink (an interesting, purposefully devised stylistic maneuver). The story of Jamal's life is told directly, with his own words, but also with what he withholds (and what is still lurking in his unconscious, with sex at the central place), and with the language he uses - there is a lot of intellectual meandering, erudite references to Freud, Lacan and other titans of psychoanalysis. On the other hand, I liked his less bragging remarks of the life in London throughout the times he describes (the "present" is 2005, when the London bombings took place), which really give the picture of the variety of lifestyles and classes. There whole narrative is a little messy in a postmodern way - a lot of important, weighty subject are just touched and put on a big pile from which they are more or less randomly selected - maybe it is really like the unconscious? Jamal's character is interesting and very well constructed - I liked reading about him, but I am not sure if I liked him - he seems unpleasant, despite his efforts to please the people he likes. Maybe it is because he is so lost, but tries to appear self-confident and nonchalant. The whole novel is complex, I guess like anyone's life - outer and inner - and prompted me to think about myself in an analytical way, but because of this complexity it is difficult to describe all that is important there without rambling... The novel is crafty, the introduction of c

"I Am Not, I Feel Certain, Finished With Love."

Jamal Khan, the narrator of Hanif Kureishi's outrageously wonderful latest novel SOMETHING TO TELL YOU is one of the most unusual protagonists you are likely to meet. Middle-aged with an expanding midriff, he is a psychoanalyst fond of quoting Freud, Dante, Proust, Faulkner, Updike, et al. with never enough money to support his estranged wife Josephine, his beloved twelve-year-old son Rafi or his own spending habits as he wears green Paul Smith loafers, among other luxuries. The son of a Pakistani father and English mother, he is haunted by his first love, a beautiful Indian woman, and at the same time guilt-ridden because of an unconfessed crime. It is no accident that he refers often to Dostoyevsky's Raskolnikov. Jamal is surrounded by a cast of characters that Kureishi draws with a myriad of details so that they come alive as complex human beings on every page. His sister Miriam, whose face is covered with what the writer calls "nuts and bolts" and whose body is full of tattoos, is a Muslim single mother of either five children by three different men or three children by five men-- Jamal cannot remember. Her new lover Henry is a theatre and film director and her brother's best friend. He is separated from his wife Valerie; their two children are Lisa, a social worker who eschews the material, having once lived in a tree and having thrown paint at McDonald's and, according to one character, probably has dirt between her toes; and Sam who is outraged when he catches his father and Miriam engaged in S/M sex. The beautiful Indian woman is Ajita, who harbors her own dark secret; her brother is Mustag who becomes a popular singer; their father is the owner of a factory in London. There are at least a half dozen more characters just as interesting in this almost four-hundred-page novel that teems with life. London, from the 1970's to the present, particularly the area around West London, becomes a character in itself. Mick Jagger even makes an appearance. Although there is a lot of sex here in at times a most comical story-- about any variety you can think of from sex clubs, houses of prostitution, orgies, male-female sex, male-male, female-female, you name it-- this novel ultimately is about things most serious: the cancerous effect of guilt, missed opportunities, the dynamics between parents and children, racial prejudice, extremism from both the left and right, the consequences of terrorism,but also hope and the wonder of love and its longevity. Jamal on the subject: "I am not, I feel certain, finished with love, either in its benign or its disorderly form, nor it with me." Kureishi writes beautifully with such phrases as a "stoned Lady Bracknell," a "Gioconda smile," a "springy Salome," and "the latest supermodel of hysteria [as in Freud], Princess Diana." One of the passages that rises to poetry is Jamal's description of his love for his son: "When he was little, I kissed Rafi continuously, licked his stomach, stuck my tongue in his ear, ti
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