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Paperback The Assassin's Song Book

ISBN: 0385663528

ISBN13: 9780385663526

The Assassin's Song

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Book Overview

In the aftermath of the brutal violence that gripped western India in 2002, Karsan Dargawalla, heir to Pirbaag - the shrine of a mysterious, medieval sufi - begins to tell the story of his family. His... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

3 ratings

One man's painful struggle to maintain balance

Imagine your life being planned for you without considering your feelings. Imagine being denied the opportunity to explore your talents because they conflict with this plan. Unfortunately we all bear this burden at some point in our lives. The extent differs, but the burden is there nonetheless. The Assassin's Song is narrated through Karsan Dargawalla who is heir to the 700-year-old shrine of a 13th century Sufi Nur Fazal. The shrine is in Gujarat, India. It is expected that Karsan, like his father and his ancestors before him, will be keeper of the shrine dispensing blessings and wisdom to all those who visit, regardless of their race, caste or religion. Karsan has an opportunity to move away from the restricted life at the shrine and explores the world outside. Later, he returns to the shrine to become its next Saheb (the role his father played before him, and the role he rebelled against). The book begins with Karsan at the shrine after his parents are dead, the shrine is destroyed, and his brother has become a militant Muslim and is wanted by the authorities for some unknown crime. Karsan says, "I, the last lord of the shrine of Pirbaag, must pick up the pieces of my trust and tell its story... ." Thus the book begins at the end and through flashbacks it pieces together the life of Karsan Dargawalla as he sees it. Interspersed are chapters that tell the tale of Nur Fazal (also known as the Wonderer). Could it be to show the imperfect symmetry between the lives of Nur Fazal and Karsan? The narrative is not poetic but contains simple truths. Karsan's teleological question is "Do we always end up where we belong?" As are questions of duty, faith, and self-awareness. It seems that there isn't one resounding truth, but a plethora of small complexities that envelope the characters - with all their contradictions. This book requires patience, empathy, and curiosity. The glossary does not offer a complete list of Indian words used through the text. The story is slow to start, but picks up about halfway through. The book explores the conflict between ancient loyalties and modern desires through Karsan Dargawalla's painful struggle to maintain a fine balance between the earthly and the ethereal. Armchair Interview says: The story is about cultural balance.

Harvard years are the best part

In this novel Vassanji attempts to convey an appreciation of the holy man tradition in India, while writing the story of a man who rebels against a life serving this tradition, instead becoming an English professor in Canada. In structure, there are parallels between this novel and Vassanji's "The In-Between World of Vikram Lall" (which I loved): both consist largely of a character looking back on his life, but, almost as a surprise to the reader, an important part of each character's life occurs after the period of reflection. Historical events play a role in both novels; here it is the ethnic massacres which are also a part of the Indian tradition, euphemistically referred to as riots. Surprisingly to me, some occurred long after Indian independence, without state authorities acting to suppress them. This is a successful, ambitious novel, but not as enthralling as "The In-Between World of Vikram Lall". Having said this, it is easier to deal with politics than the spiritual, and Vassanji does succeed in making Karsan's final life choice credible. He also makes the breakup of the marriage credible, but I would like to have heard from his wife, as a married woman, more; as a minor criticism, why didn't they double park to get their boy's drug since both were in the car, instead of spending so much time looking for a parking place? Karsan's childhood friends are not developed even as minor characters. Conversely, Karsan's coming of age during his Harvard years is done beautifully and is the best part of this novel.

Light's my middle name, too

This novel is a prime example of how the most specific of stories can have the most universal meaning. Vassanji brings to life a small piece of India -- a shrine to a Sufi mystic -- and the experience of a boy who grows to manhood full of doubts about his father's beliefs and his longing to see the world. What son has not gone through this with his father? The relationship between Karsan and his brother also resonates deeply with men who have younger brothers -- and the tensions that arise when they follow different paths, even as the eternal bonds of brotherhood bring them together. These universal struggles -- father and son, brother and brother -- are set against the fascinating backdrop of Indian nationalism, the deadly Hindu-Moslem conflict and the story of a medieval Sufi mystic whose life and teaching are shrouded in tragedy. All the while, we're aware that the Sufism as practiced by the father -- the Avatar -- sets the family apart, and Karsan feels the apartness no matter where he goes, either to a Christian school in India, to Harvard, to Canada or back to India. Are all these differences really just illusion, and if so, why do people persist in preserving them? Vassanji does a wonderful job of putting the reader inside Karsan's life thanks to effective description, a gripping plot and wonderfully drawn, tragic characters, from Karsan's movie-going mom to the truck driver who opens Karsan's world to the MIT student with whom Karsan falls in love.
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