Publication
Collections
Awards
Description
"Before violence tore apart the tapestry of Sri Lanka and turned its pristine beaches red, there were two families. Yasodhara tells the story of her own Sinhala family, rich in love, with everything they could ask for. As a child in idyllic Colombo, Yasodhara's and her siblings' lives are shaped by social hierarchies, their parents' ambitions, teenage love and, subtly, the differences between Tamil and Sinhala people; but the peace is shattered by the tragedies of war. Yasodhara's family escapes to Los Angeles. But Yasodhara's life has already become intertwined with a young Tamil girl's... Saraswathie is living in the active war zone of Sri Lanka, and hopes to become a teacher. But her dreams for the future are abruptly stamped out when she is arrested by a group of Sinhala soldiers and pulled into the very heart of the conflict that she has tried so hard to avoid - a conflict that, eventually, will connect her and Yasodhara in unexpected ways. In the tradition of Michael Ondatjee's Anil's Ghost and Arundhati Roy's The God of Small Things, Island of a Thousand Mirrors is an emotionally resonant saga of cultural heritage, heartbreaking conflict and deep family bonds. Narrated in two unforgettably authentic voices and spanning the entirety of the decades-long civil war, it offers an unparalleled portrait of a beautiful land during its most difficult moment by a spellbinding new literary talent who promises tremendous things to come"--… (more)
User reviews
The evocative, powerful prose of author Nayomi Munaweera depicts the brutal senseless violence of the Sri Lankan Civil War through the eyes of innocent Tamil and Sinhalese families. These experiences of children,
Only 237 pages, this is an epic generational of the family of Yasodhara Rajasinghe, a Sinhalese girl, beginning at the time of British colonialism and ending with the killing of the leader of the Tamil Tigers and the aftermath of 80,000 lives taken by the Civil War. This contrasts with the unraveling of a Tamil family, living in the north. With an economy of words, Munaweera shows us the beauty of the island and its customs and culture so we can appreciate the losses. We see the flight of Tamils from Sri Lanka to refugee camps where they merely exist, and to the United States, with the transition from saris to blue jeans and American English.
Experiencing the strife on a personal level allows us to understand the ethnic struggle and the country’s suffering. The violence of the Sinhalese and Tamils devastates families. Children vanish to training camps and reappear as killing machines. Mobs slaughter loved ones. Centuries of irreplaceable history disappear in the riot that burned the books and ancient manuscripts of the Jaffna Library.
The scent of jasmine carries us through Sri Lanka’s history.
• The house of Yasodhara’s mother in Colombo has an inner courtyard with an enormous trailing jasmine. “When the sea breeze whispers, a snowy flurry of flowers sweeps into the house so that Visaka’s earliest and most tender memory is the combined scent of jasmine and sea salt.”
• At the wedding ceremony of Visaka’s arranged marriage, she rides in a car “adorned in jasmine.”
• When flying to America to escape the violence, Yasodhara says good-bye to “the scent of jasmine so potent, it catches the attention of traveling poets and writers.”
• When the two young girls of the northern Tamil family, Saraswathi and Luxshmi, encounter a mob that has disemboweled a man, a street vender gives the girls a string of Jasmine so that they “[h]ave something sweet to smell today.”
• When Saraswathi is beaten and raped by Sinhalese soldiers, her mother brings her strings of jasmine.
• When Yasodhara’s sister phones her in Los Angeles begging her to return to Sri Lanka, “for a moment her words hand in the air like a possibility, the sudden scent of jasmine and sea air swirling in the room.”
• Saraswathi, given up to the Tamil Tigers, lives in a training camp “fragrant with the scent of jasmine trailing off the thick garlands that bedeck the portraits of the martyrs.”
• The young Tamil Tiger girl suicide bomber carries a jasmine garland to drape around the neck of her target, allowing her to move close to him.
I highly recommend “Island of a Thousand Mirrors,” an important book.
I enjoyed the writing which was clear and moving. The descriptions of the island were wonderful, not just the physical beauty but the smells of food, people and nature. I felt like I really knew the characters. I hope the final edition has a “cast
Book groups will find themselves discussing discrimination, arranged marriage, ethnic differences, education, parental desires for their children, the life of the immigrant in a new land, jealousy between siblings, soldier versus terrorist, the effect of violence on people and culture, and the sense of smell. Some groups may find the descriptions of sexuality (including violent rape) disturbing.
4 of 5 stars
Disclosure: I received this book through GoodReads' FirstRead Program.
Did not know very
The second part shows the full horror of the Tamil Tigers, and shows the violence against women, the hard cost to families and the deaths and cruelty of many. A very well written book about a hard subject. I applaud the authors unbiased writing and that she took the time to show the reader the full cost of these hostilities on regular families just trying to live normal lives. Bravo.
ARC from NetGalley.
The background of the story is Sri Lanka's civil war (1983-2009) between the Tamil minority (Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam) and the majority Sinhalese (Sri Lankan military). The war resulted in 80,000 deaths.
Like all wars, there are no easy answers. A quote from one of the characters attempts to explain to American friends what is happening in Sri Lanka:
"There are no martyrs here. It is a war between equally corrupt forces. I see their eyes glaze over. I realize they do not desire a complicated answer. They want clear distinctions between the cowboys and the Indians, the corrupt administration and the valiant freedom fighters, the democratic government and the raging terrorists. They want moral certainty, a thing I cannot give them."
The main characters are 2 Sinhalese sisters (Yasodhara and Lanka), a Tamil boy (Shiva), whose family rented the upstairs of their house, and Saraswathi, a Tamil girl from the north of the island. We learn the stories of their families and how their lives become intertwined over the years. The brutality of the war is devastatingly depicted and I found that as the pace picked up in the last third of the book, I couldn't put it down.
Dominated by strong female characters, it's a powerful and interesting read. Definitely recommended.
This book is about Sri Lanka’s Civil War between the Sinhalese and Tamils that took place 1983 – 2009. It is told from the perspective of the eldest daughter of two families, one from each side. One family migrates to the US, but they keep abreast on current events, and the vast majority of the book is centered around Sri Lanka. The other family stays and tries to evade the hostilities but ends up immersed in it. The author provides enough historic content to give the reader the necessary background. It examines the question of what leads someone to become a martyr to the cause:
“What could have led her to this singularly terrible end? What secret wound bled until she chose this most public disassembly of herself? Just moments earlier she had been just another nameless woman in the teeming crowd; now, blown to bits, she was either martyr or mass murderer, according to one’s taste. Either way she had attained instant immortality. But what had led her to that moment? This is a question that haunts me.”
The writing is lyrically descriptive, featuring many cultural elements – food, clothing, customs, religions, and traditions. It contains vivid images of the seascape surrounding the island nation:
“Farther out beyond the reef, where the coral gives way to the true deep, at a certain time of day a tribe of flat silver fish gather in their thousands. To be there is to be surrounded by living shards of light. At a secret signal, all is chaos, a thousand mirrors shattering about him. Then the school speeds to sea and the boy is left in sedate water, a tug and pull of the body as comfortable as sitting in his father’s outspread sarong being sung to sleep.”
It portrays life before the civil war, and how it changed. It is a difficult read in that it describes brutal violence, rapes, burnings, and suicide bombings. Even with all this violent content, the author manages to convey hope for the future.
The book opens with the story of her Sinhala parents’ peaceful childhood, their arranged marriage and the
The author does a masterful job of describing the island with it’s vibrant colors, exotic tastes, and lively sounds making the violence and anger of the Civil War all the more jarring and shocking. Island of a Thousand Mirrors is a painful read, all the more heartbreaking when you learn that a hundred thousand lives were lost in this war.