![]() ![]() One couple living near a small New England campus "used to trail their fingers, at the start of each new semester, through the columns of the university directory, circling surnames familiar to their part of the world"Īnother faculty wife, who has taken a baby-sitting job to fill her empty afternoons, tells her young charge that everything she cares about remains in India in the home she left behind. Lahiri's people are Indian immigrants trying to adjust to a new life in the United States, and their cultural displacement is a kind of index of a more existential sense of dislocation. Lahiri's prose is so eloquent and assured that the reader easily forgets that "Interpreter of Maladies" is a young writer's first book. Herself as a wonderfully distinctive new voice. N this accomplished collection of stories, Jhumpa Lahiri traces the lives of people on two continents - North America and India - and in doing so announces ![]() First Chapter: 'Interpreter of Maladies'.Caleb Crain Reviews 'Interpreter of Maladies' (July 11).'Interpreter of Maladies': Liking America, but Longing for IndiaīOOKS OF THE TIMES 'Interpreter of Maladies': Liking America, but Longing for India ![]()
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