Admiring Silence

Hardcover, 216 pages

English language

Published Oct. 18, 1996 by New Press.

ISBN:
978-1-56584-349-3
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(2 reviews)

4 editions

Uneventful, but highly impactful.

There is very little that happens in this Nobel Prize-winning novel, and yet, it's one of the most impactful books I've read this year. I'm married to an immigrant who came to the West, seeking opportunity and security. I've witnessed firsthand the emotional and psychological challenges that befall anyone who undertakes a cultural transition, the myriad, minor conflicts that play out in every aspect of daily life and relationships. It is a hard life, and Abdulrazak Gurnah captures it beautifully in this understated novel.

The main character, a fatherless man in his forties who immigrated from Zanzibar to England for an education, remains nameless. After moving to Great Britain in the 1960s, he meets a beautiful (and rebellious) white girl named Emma from a conservative family, and settles into a common law marriage with her. He lives almost wholly cut off from his family in Zanzibar, brushing off Emma's questions …

Review of 'Admiring Silence' on 'Goodreads'

As a migrant from one European country to another, a lot of what Gurnah wrote was surprisingly familiar to me. The shock that your country of birth "wasn't home anymore" is something that all migrants feel, whilst also retaining the "our" when thinking about the country of origin, as he also writes. Of course, the differences between Zanzibar and England are much greater than I have experienced and the powerful analogies he makes between his personal life and his situation convey that very nicely. He writes beautifully as well, it was a pleasure to read the text purely for the way he forms the sentences, as well as the narrative carrying the reader along nicely.

Subjects

  • General
  • Fiction - General
  • African Contemporary Fiction
  • Fiction

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