Jasmine

by Bharati Mukherjee

Paperback, 1999

Publication

Grove Press (1999), Edition: 1ST, Paperback, 256 pages

Description

When Jasmine is suddenly widowed at seventeen, she seems fated to a life of quiet isolation in the small Indian village where she was born. But the force of Jasmine's desires propels her explosively into a larger, more dangerous, and ultimately more life-giving world. In just a few years, Jasmine becomes Jane Ripplemeyer, happily pregnant by a middle-aged Iowa banker and the adoptive mother of a Vietnamese refugee. Jasmine's metamorphosis, with its shocking upheavals and its slow evolutionary steps, illuminates the making of an American mind; but even more powerfully, her story depicts the shifting contours of an America being transformed by her and others like her -- our new neighbors, friends, and lovers. In Jasmine, Bharati Mukherjee has created a heroine as exotic and unexpected as the many worlds in which she lives. "Rich...one of the most suggestive novels we have about what it is to become an American." -- The New York Times Book Review… (more)

Media reviews

Though ''Jasmine'' attests to an eye for meticulous observation and an ear for contemporary American slang, it becomes clear that Ms. Mukherjee is less interested in giving us a realistic depiction of one woman's peripatetic life than in creating a fable, a kind of impressionistic prose-poem, about
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being an exile, a refugee, a spiritual vagabond in the world today; and in this, she has eloquently succeeded.
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1 more
''Jasmine'' stands as one of the most suggestive novels we have about what it is to become an American.

Language

Physical description

256 p.; 8.23 inches

ISBN

0802136303 / 9780802136305
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