Category: | Book |
By (author): | Kunzru, Hari |
Subject: | FICTION / General |
FICTION / Humorous / General | |
FICTION / Literary | |
FICTION / Sagas | |
Awards: | Guardian First Book Award Winner British Book Award Winner Book Sense 76 Top Ten Selection Winner NYPL Books to Remember Winner Barnes and Noble Discover Great New Writers Award Winner Art Seidenbaum Award Winner Society of Authors Somerset Maugham Award Winner |
Publisher: | Penguin Publishing Group |
Published: | March 2003 |
Format: | Book-paperback |
Pages: | 480 |
Size: | 8.00in x 5.30in x 1.30in |
From The Publisher* | Pran Nath Razdan, the boy who will become the Impressionist, was passed off by his Indian mother as the child of her husband, a wealthy man of a high caste. Pran lived a life of luxury just downriver from the Taj Mahal, but at fifteen, the news of Pran's true parentage is revealed to his father and he is tossed out into the street-a pariah and an outcast. Thus begins an extraordinary, near mythical journey of a young man who must reinvent himself to survive-not once, but many times. From Victorian India to Edwardian London, from an expatriate community of black Americans in Paris to a hopeless expedition to study a lost tribe of Africa, Hari Kunzru's unforgettable debut novel dazzles with its artistry and wit while it challenges with its insights into what it means to be Indian or English, black or white, and every degree that lies between. |
Review Quote* | "Delectable, sweeping, empire-savaging, audaciously playful … Kunzru writes with wry certitude and cinematic precision" -New York Times "A sprawling, ambitious, shape-shifting novel…Kunzru proves himself a clever, sharply observant writer." -The Washington Post "Nothing is as it seems in this serpentine Dickensian epic…Kunzru nicely limns the fickle roles race and class play in civilized societies." -People magazine "A witty, well-crafted comic saga of the dark side of the British Empire" -Financial Times"Glorious, hilarious. Kunzru has created a book in which we can feel at home in the strangeness of his gorgeous imagination" -Boston Sunday Herald "Riveting stuff, beautifully written … Superb" -The Times (London) "The Impressionist is both a great adventure yarn and an exploration of identity, both personal and national…One might be occasionally reminded of Salman Rushdie or Evelyn Waugh (Brideshead Revisited)." -Detroit Free Press "Superb. Smart, entertaining and engaging on many levels" -Dallas Morning News "Grand, sprawling, extravagant, lyrical. A work so vibrant and richly imagined that you can smell the incense" -Esquire "Epic in scale and rich in historical detail, the narrative is deft and swift … carrying the reader along effortlessly. This first novel has startling depth, ambition and craftsmanship" -Time Out London "A narrative with just the right blend of misadventure, humor, and humiliation…Call Kunzru amodern-day Kipling." -GQ "Maniacally inventive-a fantastic funhouse of a novel." -Vogue "The next literary lion." -Independent on Sunday (UK)
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Biographical Note | Hari Kunzru, author of the award-winning and bestselling novel The Impressionist, was named as one of Granta's "20 Best Fiction Writers Under 40." The Impressionist was a Los Angeles Times Book Prize finalist; was shortlisted for the Guardian First Book Award, the Whitbread First Novel Award, and a British Book Award; and was one of Publishers Weekly's Best Novels of 2002. Kunzru has written for a variety of English and international publications, including The Guardian, Daily Telegraph, The London Review of Books, and Wired. |