The Red Carpet: Bangalore Stories
Witty, affectionate, and wonderfully wise, Lavanya Sankaran’s first collection attests to her remarkable literary talent.
Riveting stories. Really good ones.
While the first four stories of the collection are much better than the last four, all of them are well-written and provide a keen observational eye into the (mostly well-off) lives of their protagonists.
I've had mixed feeling for this book. The stories revolves around Bangalore itself. The thing which bothers me is that there is nothing new for the Indian readers. Although writer had nicely created the characters and scenes especially showing the typical Indian mentality of being interested in others life. A broad view of culture, differences, castism, changing values and yes, IT life at the most. The language is at its BEST. ONE TIME READ.
"The Red Carpet" is nothing more than a collection of average stories set in Bangalore. An Indian American teenager who comes to India expecting an egalitarian society only to be surprised by the Iyer-Iyengar rivalries, an aging neighbour's voyeuristic analysis of the generation gap, the software industry and a few others exploring the party circuit make up the collection. Except for the story "Mysore coffee" which analyses depression and suicide, this is one forgettable collection.
I picked this book because I thought it was a set of stories set in Bangalore, a city where I spent one full year of my childhood, and hence it occupies a special place in my heart. I do return to Bangalore on and off, and I love the city. On that front, I was disappointed, because the city is merely a location in the book; I was somewhat expecting it to be more than that.Like any short story collection, this one is a mixed bag. There were some stories that made me laugh, some that made me
A very nice collection of stories,very well written and so real..it has a good humour quotient which I really liked.All stories have a backdrop of Bangalore cityMy favorite is 'Closed curtains'-an old man's hope of finding his son in his neighbour.I liked 'the red carpet' too-a touching story.Trying to see if Lavanya has written more books..Would love to read them!
Lavanya Sankaran
Hardcover | Pages: 224 pages Rating: 3.36 | 568 Users | 67 Reviews
Describe Books Toward The Red Carpet: Bangalore Stories
Original Title: | The Red Carpet: Bangalore Stories |
ISBN: | 0385338171 (ISBN13: 9780385338172) |
Edition Language: | English |
Explanation During Books The Red Carpet: Bangalore Stories
Wry humor and a delicious grasp of the friction between generations in Bangalore are the hallmarks of Lavanya Sankaran’s fresh, deeply nuanced debut collection. “A potpourri of beggars and billionaires and determinedly laid-back ways,” Bangalore, India’s own Silicon Valley, is a crucible for prosperity, and at the chaotic crossroads between past and present. Here, American-trained professionals like Tara return to their old-fashioned families with heads full of Quentin Tarantino dialogue; a successful entrepreneur is shaken when his partner suddenly reneges on their plan to return to America; a traditional Indian mother slyly circumvents her Western-educated daughter’s resistance to marriage; a neighborhood gossip is determined to discover what goes on behind the closed curtains of the hip young couple across the street; a chauffeur must reconcile his more orthodox credos with his employer’s miniskirt lifestyle.Witty, affectionate, and wonderfully wise, Lavanya Sankaran’s first collection attests to her remarkable literary talent.
Specify Out Of Books The Red Carpet: Bangalore Stories
Title | : | The Red Carpet: Bangalore Stories |
Author | : | Lavanya Sankaran |
Book Format | : | Hardcover |
Book Edition | : | First Edition |
Pages | : | Pages: 224 pages |
Published | : | April 26th 2005 by The Dial Press |
Categories | : | Short Stories. Fiction. Cultural. India. Asian Literature. Indian Literature |
Rating Out Of Books The Red Carpet: Bangalore Stories
Ratings: 3.36 From 568 Users | 67 ReviewsPiece Out Of Books The Red Carpet: Bangalore Stories
Riveting stories. Really good ones.
While the first four stories of the collection are much better than the last four, all of them are well-written and provide a keen observational eye into the (mostly well-off) lives of their protagonists.
I've had mixed feeling for this book. The stories revolves around Bangalore itself. The thing which bothers me is that there is nothing new for the Indian readers. Although writer had nicely created the characters and scenes especially showing the typical Indian mentality of being interested in others life. A broad view of culture, differences, castism, changing values and yes, IT life at the most. The language is at its BEST. ONE TIME READ.
"The Red Carpet" is nothing more than a collection of average stories set in Bangalore. An Indian American teenager who comes to India expecting an egalitarian society only to be surprised by the Iyer-Iyengar rivalries, an aging neighbour's voyeuristic analysis of the generation gap, the software industry and a few others exploring the party circuit make up the collection. Except for the story "Mysore coffee" which analyses depression and suicide, this is one forgettable collection.
I picked this book because I thought it was a set of stories set in Bangalore, a city where I spent one full year of my childhood, and hence it occupies a special place in my heart. I do return to Bangalore on and off, and I love the city. On that front, I was disappointed, because the city is merely a location in the book; I was somewhat expecting it to be more than that.Like any short story collection, this one is a mixed bag. There were some stories that made me laugh, some that made me
A very nice collection of stories,very well written and so real..it has a good humour quotient which I really liked.All stories have a backdrop of Bangalore cityMy favorite is 'Closed curtains'-an old man's hope of finding his son in his neighbour.I liked 'the red carpet' too-a touching story.Trying to see if Lavanya has written more books..Would love to read them!
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