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Khushwant Singh, 1956
Train to Pakistan
Khushwant Singh, 1956
GenevaBookClub: Khushwant Singh digs into the Partition of India with a deep local focus, providing a human dimension which brings to the event a sense of reality, horror, and believability. Summer of 1947: Partition does not mean much to the Sikhs and Muslims of Mano Majra, a village on the border of India and Pakistan. Then, a local money-lender is murdered, and suspicion falls upon Juggut Singh, the village gangster who is in love with a Muslim girl. When a train arrives, carrying the bodies of dead Sikhs, the village is transformed into a battlefield, and neither the magistrate nor the police are able to stem the rising tide of violence. Amidst conflicting loyalties, it is left to Juggut Singh to redeem himself and reclaim peace for his village. In a relatively short book, the reader gets to know a lot of characters in detail. Examination of the varied groups of people increases cultural and social understanding of that time and place & shows that the blame couldn't be placed on any one group.
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Salman Rushdie, 1980
Midnight's Children
Salman Rushdie, 1980
GenevaBookClub: Midnight's Children (by Salman Rushdie, English 1980) is a historical chronicle of modern India centering on the inextricably linked fates of two children born within the first hour of independence from Great Britain. Exactly at midnight on Aug. 15, 1947, two boys are born in a Bombay hospital, where they are switched by a nurse. Saleem Sinai, who will be raised by a well-to-do Muslim couple, is actually the illegitimate son of a low-caste Hindu woman and a departing British colonist. Shiva, the son of the Muslim couple, is given to a poor Hindu street performer whose unfaithful wife has died. Saleem represents modern India. Shiva is destined to be Saleem's enemy as well as India's most honored war hero. This multilayered novel places Saleem in every significant event that occurred on the Indian subcontinent in the 30 years after independence. Midnight's Children was awarded the Booker Prize for fiction in 1981.
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