The Bones of Grace: A Novel (Bangla Desh Book 3)
The Bones of Grace: A Novel (Bangla Desh Book 3) book cover

The Bones of Grace: A Novel (Bangla Desh Book 3)

Kindle Edition

Price
$14.99
Publisher
Harper
Publication Date

Description

“This tale of Zubaida’s search for her true identity, and the romantic and professional choices she makes along the way, provides a gripping conclusion to Anam’s insightful and enlightening trilogy.” -- Booklist (starred review) “For those lucky enough to now be discovering Anam for the first time, a priceless literary gift awaits…” -- Christian Science Monitor “Beauty and pain thrive alongside one another in Anam’s intricate tragedy of thwarted love and deep divides in social classes…compelling…” -- Shelf Awareness “Anam’s story resonates powerfully within the saga of three generations of women personifying Bangladesh’s evolution from the clarity of revolution to the confusions of assimilation with the larger world.” -- Kirkus “Expansive yet intimate, weighty yet incisively funny, THE BONES OF GRACE is a powerful examination of what it means to live in a world of collapsing boundaries and conflicting values. Few people write about identity and culture with such elegance and intelligence as Tahmima Anam.” -- Tash Aw, author of Five Star Billionaire “Lyrical and intimate…Powerful and beautifully written, tinged with hope but beset by tragedy… A modern love story, The Bones of Grace glimmers with hope, shimmers with beautiful prose, and shines with vivid characterization.” -- Manhattan Book Review “Anam captures two very different cultures in an introspective character study that will mesmerize readers from the very first page.” -- Publishers Weekly “A novel of heart, brain, and muscle - the competing pulls of history and love are evoked here with a rare honesty, and great skill.” -- Kamila Shamsie, author of BURNT SHADOWS “The Bones of Grace is beautifully written and carefully crafted, satisfyingly weaving together its twists and turns…” -- India Today “Anam’s writing is most memorable when she deals in love and bones―the romance and the paleontological work she calls ‘our little argument with time.’” -- The New Yorker “Can any writer capture what’s going on? If one could, it would be Tahmima Anam, arguably Bangladesh’s most influential living writer… Her third book, THE BONES OF GRACE, runs all the way up to the present. It’s also so sharply realistic that for those who have lived in Bangladesh recently (like me), it feels like nonfiction.” -- Lithub.com “Can any writer capture what’s going on? If one could, it would be Tahmima Anam, arguably Bangladesh’s most influential living writer… Her third book, THE BONES OF GRACE, runs all the way up to the present. It’s also so sharply realistic that for those who have lived in Bangladesh recently (like me), it feels like nonfiction.” -- Claire McAlpine, BookBrowse “Fierce and intimate, lyrical and expansive, The Bones of Grace offers what a great novel does: symphonic movements, historical landscapes that shape our private landscapes of love and life, mysteries and enchantments, the unforgettable and the unforgotten. Tahmima Anam is a mesmerizer.” -- Yiyun Li, author of KINDER THAN SOLITUDE and THE VAGRANTS, PEN/Hemingway Award Winner “An engrossing tale set in an unfamiliar landscape that is both a love story and a glimpse into the lives of people living and working in the most unfortunate circumstances.” -- Library Journal “Love and estrangement, science and tradition, discovery and loss - with majesty, brilliant metaphor and unerring precision, Tahmima Anam explores the essential dichotomies of our present and past.” -- Manil Suri, author of THE DEATH OF VISHNU “Reading THE BONES OF GRACE, Tahmima Anam’s new novel, you’ll be moved by the author’s portrayal of hollowed-out characters pining for that which would make them whole again.” -- Minneapolis Star Tribune --This text refers to an alternate kindle_edition edition. From the Inside Flap On the eve of her departure to find the bones of the walking whale--the fossil that provides a missing link in our evolution--Zubaida Haque falls in love with Elijah Strong, a man she meets in a darkened concert hall in Boston. Their connection is immediate and intense, despite their differences: Elijah belongs to a prototypical American family; Zubaida is the adopted daughter of a wealthy Bangladeshi family in Dhaka. When a twist of fate sends her back to her hometown, the inevitable force of society compels her to take a very different path: she marries her childhood best friend and settles into a traditional Bangladeshi life. While her family is pleased by her obedience, Zubaida seethes with discontent. Desperate to finally free herself from her familial constraints, she moves to Chittagong to work on a documentary film about the infamous beaches where decommissioned ships are destroyed, their remains salvaged by locals who depend on the goods for their survival. Among them is Anwar, a ship-breaker whose story holds a key that will unlock the mysteries of Zubaida's past--and the possibilities of a new life. -- Tash Aw, author of Five Star Billionaire --This text refers to an alternate kindle_edition edition. Tahmima Anam is an anthropologist and a novelist. Her debut novel, A Golden Age , won the 2008 Commonwealth Writers Prize for Best First Book. In 2013, she was named one of Granta’ s Best Young British Novelists. She is a contributing opinion writer for the New York Times and was a judge for the 2016 International Man Booker Prize. Born in Dhaka, Bangladesh, she was educated at Mount Holyoke College and Harvard University, and now lives in Hackney, East London. --This text refers to an alternate kindle_edition edition. On the eve of her departure to find the bones of the walking whale—the fossil that provides a missing link in our evolution—Zubaida Haque falls in love with Elijah Strong, a man she meets in a darkened concert hall in Boston. Their connection is immediate and intense, despite their differences: Elijah belongs to a prototypical American family; Zubaida is the adopted daughter of a wealthy Bangladeshi family in Dhaka. When a twist of fate sends her back to her hometown, the inevitable force of society compels her to take a very different path: she marries her childhood best friend and settles into a traditional Bangladeshi life. While her family is pleased by her obedience, Zubaida seethes with discontent. Desperate to finally free herself from her familial constraints, she moves to Chittagong to work on a documentary film about the infamous beaches where decommissioned ships are destroyed, their remains salvaged by locals who depend on the goods for their survival. Among them is Anwar, a ship-breaker whose story holds a key that will unlock the mysteries of Zubaida’s past—and the possibilities of a new life. --This text refers to an alternate kindle_edition edition. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • From the award-winning, nationally bestselling author of
  • A Golden Age
  • and
  • The Good Muslim
  • comes a lyrical, deeply moving modern love story about belonging, migration, tragedy, survival, and the mysteries of origins.
  • On the eve of her departure to find the bones of the walking whale—the fossil that provides a missing link in our evolution—Zubaida Haque falls in love with Elijah Strong, a man she meets in a darkened concert hall in Boston. Their connection is immediate and intense, despite their differences: Elijah belongs to a prototypical American family; Zubaida is the adopted daughter of a wealthy Bangladeshi family in Dhaka. When a twist of fate sends her back to her hometown, the inevitable force of society compels her to take a very different path: she marries her childhood best friend and settles into a traditional Bangladeshi life.
  • While her family is pleased by her obedience, Zubaida seethes with discontent. Desperate to finally free herself from her familial constraints, she moves to Chittagong to work on a documentary film about the infamous beaches where ships are destroyed, and their remains salvaged by locals who depend on the goods for their survival. Among them is Anwar, a shipbreaker whose story holds a key that will unlock the mysteries of Zubaida’s past—and the possibilities of a new life. As she witnesses a ship being torn down to its bones, this woman torn between the social mores of her two homes—Bangladesh and America—will be forced to strip away the vestiges of her own life . . . and make a choice from which she can never turn back.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(66)
★★★★
25%
(55)
★★★
15%
(33)
★★
7%
(15)
23%
(51)

Most Helpful Reviews

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The first two books were better

I have already enthusiastically reviewed Tahmima Anam's earlier two books . This third one was difficult to like. It seemed too long and lost the tautness of a story well told. There were very interesting stories within the story : The detailed tale of the Shipbreaking investigation with its tragic and wonderfully depicted characters could be a book by itself . Zubaida's melancholic and contrite voice recounting the relationship and the events and complex emotions -that brought her and Elijah together and then apart- comes through consistently - but Elijah Strong remains individually elusive and unknowable. Did the author mean for us to think of Elijah as the one type of American that a far eastern woman can be passionately involved with but who himself remains with no voice ? Still interested to read more from this promising author.
3 people found this helpful
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Three Stars

she seems to lose her way halfway through but pulls it all together at the end.
2 people found this helpful
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The Golden Age and The Good Muslim. It is a narrated by Zubaidah Haque

Bones of Grace by Tahmima Anam succeeds on the most objective level in that it made me want to read Anam’s other books, The Golden Age and The Good Muslim. It is a narrated by Zubaidah Haque, a Bangladeshi woman who grew up with relative privilege. She attended college in the US, studied paleontology and when the book opens, is about to leave for a dig in Baluchistan, Pakistan, to search for ambulocetus, the walking whale, a transitional creature of the land and sea. The symbolism is obvious, as she is a transitional woman, both Bangladeshi and Western. She is also torn between her passionate love for Elijah whom she met just as she was preparing to leave Harvard for the dig and her comfortable and expected love for Rashid, her childhood friend and sweetheart to whom she is engaged.

Although Zubaidah chooses duty and family, she also feels alienated and alone, obsessed with the knowledge that she was adopted. That she has no one of her own blood. She wants to find her mother, but no one will tell her anything. She is unhappy and takes a job translating and helping a documentarian who is doing a film about the shipbreaking industry in Bangladesh. This got me looking into the National Geographic article that Gabriela, the documentarian read and was inspired by. This was fascinating and, of course, was a vehicle to advance the story, bringing together Zubaidah, Rashid, Elijah and the secrets of her past.

3paws

I liked Bones of Grace, but I did not love it. I thought her love for Elijah was sort of unreal. Sure, people do fall in love at first sight and it can be passionate and heartfelt, but the love story felt sort of false, a construct necessary to create a conflict. While I loved that they wrote each other texts in Nina Simone song titles, Elijah was too much of a counterpoint to Rashid, I think. Anam was much more believable writing about the marriage to Rashid and their relationship. I appreciated that she resisted the impulse to make him a bad husband.

The real villain, if there is one, is Zubaidah herself. She is type of character who drives me nuts, who decides by not deciding, who goes along to get along, and then wallows in misery. Of course, if she had been honest, true to herself, she would have acted differently and there would have been no story. That’s the problem for readers like me, the characters we like, the ones who talk to people and say what they think and speak up for themselves just don’t end up in these travails of being married to someone they like while pining for someone they love.

However, the story has many fascinating elements. For example, Zee’s parents were freedom fighters whose nostalgia for their glory days frustrates her a bit. It reminds me of people of my generation and how we get tired of hearing about people from the Sixties waxing nostalgic for their activism. That is so realistic and human, the faint envy of missing out on greatness, of the opportunity to be challenged to greatness.

I also appreciate that Bones of Grace presents a complex Bangladesh. Yes, there is extreme poverty. Yes, life is hard for the poor and even harder for poor women. But there is a middle class, an entrepreneurial class, women who are educated. They are not wearing burkas and they are working. Zee’s mother is working to prosecute war criminals. Her mother’s friend is working for labor rights for workers. Because Anam is Bangladeshi, she is capable of capturing the contradictions and complexity of her country. She loves Bangladesh and it, perhaps more than anything else, is the real rival for her love, not Rashid.

I received an advance copy for review from publishers via the GoodReads Giveaways program.
2 people found this helpful
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A complex insight into modern, South Asia...........

I do enjoy fiction that is generated by the Indian sub-continent mind and how the people find their way through life. Most of my interest in this genre is due to my travels through that part of the planet; having worked with and befriended those from there; and finding those people interesting, especially in their spiritual and philosophical lives.

This novel is definitely told from the female point to view and the bits that delve deeply into the psyche of the main character who seems to have a foot in both her Bangladeshi and American cultures, as well as male relationships, could get on one's nerves. However, if one doesn't like plots that go forward, then backtrack and continually wax eloquent on the feelings of the narrator, then this book could seem tedious to the reader.

Sometimes I had to skim the lengthly bits that described the narrator's deep angst and guilt about the conflicting male relationships that drive the novel's storyline. In contrast, to be fair to the author's style, I did find the insights into the archeological-anthropogical scenarios; the real life throes in which the poor are exploited by the rich, in the business of breaking up decommissioned ships; and how the rich, Brahman class is allowed to rise above the sufferings of the masses.

However negative this review may seem to some, the author does have a talent to depict how the progress of a young Asian nation, in this case Bangladesh in post-independence times, has struggled to serve all its citizens, while sloughing off the cloak of colonial and pre-independence times. The characters are varied and do span a wide range of social levels of that Asian society. Ms. Anam definitely has a knack for bringing the reader into the world of modern day, South Asia, in its complex philosophy and cultural divisions.
1 people found this helpful
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Intriguing

Intriguing way to tell a story. Sometimes a little confusing when the author mentions characters like Anwar who haven't been introduced yet. The switch to Anwar telling the story did interrupt the flow of the narrative. I liked the way everything came full circle in the end and the story ended without a reconciliation with Elijah.
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Literature at its best

Evocative, edifying and engaging.

The cruelty and irrationality of religious fundamentalism, and racism are universal. Whether it is Pakistanis on Pakistanis, or Americans on Americans, or anywhere else. Race and religion seem to inspire far more hate than anything else. Though, lately, Political parties have inspired the kind of zealotry and irrational faith that one would have only associated with traditional religions.
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Search for the whale that walked

A sweeping landscape of history, geological time, and a young woman's search for understanding...
Anam's story is complex and compelling, spanning a time when whales had ankles, freedom fighters in Bangladesh in 1971, and contemporary class issues.
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Time

Give this story the time to develop, give patience to the characters and you will be rewarded with a wonderfully told story of loss, love and acceptance of one's self.
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Interesting and dangerous

Posted first to Blog Critics as Book Review: 'The Bones of Grace,' A Novel by Tahmima Anam.

A serendipitous meeting, a deep seated love, and a clash of cultures are threaded throughout the backdrop of The Bones of Grace by Tahmima Anam. Zubaida Haque is on a quest to find the bones of the walking whale, a fossil that could provide a missing link in evolution. It is during this quest that she has a chance meeting with Elijah during a concert. Elijah is the typical American of the time, and Zubaida is the adopted daughter of a family in Dhaka, Bangladesh.

Yet her life is dictated by her upbringing, and at her families insistence, she marries her childhood best friend and resigns herself to live the typical life of the Bangladesh expectation. Giving up her dream of finding her whale and making a decision to forget about Elijah, she finds herself unhappy and feeling confined. A friend offers her an out, when they find a need for her assistance on a documentary film about the beaches of Chittagong where ships are destroyed and then broken down and the pieces sold to the highest bidder.

The locals work this highly dangerous job as the pay helps them to take care of their families. It is here that Zubaida meets Anwar, a man who seems to know the secrets of her past, and how she came to be adopted. Her life is changing, and she now must make a choice, continue with her marriage, making both herself and her husband unhappy, or move forward to the life she had imagined for herself.

Can she move forward and save what she had with Elijah and will she ever fulfill her dream of finding her fossil and her own background. Taking apart ships is dangerous for those involved, but also a way out of their own misery. It is here that Zubaida finds her inner strength once again, and now she must make her hardest decision, one from which she cannot turn back. Is this what she has been looking for all along?

If you enjoy, beauty, romance, and danger, as well as literary fiction this would be a great book for your library. Once started the elements inherent to this type of book will keep you reading. There is a sadness twisting through the story, and yet you find it is just a part of the life of those involved.Anam takes us into a country of beauty and traditions, but also danger and death. She gives us a romance and a hope of renewal in characters that are strong, yet with a depth of feeling. Zubaida is just trying to follow the dictates of her family, which she has never felt part of, but she finds it even more difficult after her chance meeting with Elijah. She follows the dictates of her family because it is what is expected, but Anam also gives Zubaida a core of reserve where she compartmentalizes the hurts and feelings that drive her.

This would be a great book for a reading group or book club with a great deal of interest and creative discussion.
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Definitely 5 Stars

Beautifully written