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Tuesday, December 19, 2023

A History of Burning by Janika Oza

I enjoyed this book, which spans four continents and five generations of an Indian family as they’re forced to migrate again and again for political and economic reasons. In 1898, 13-year-old Pirbhai, the oldest son of a poor family in western India, heads out to find work. He’s conscripted to a railroad builder in Kenya, where he labors for several years. After the project is finished, he lucks into a job at a store run by an Indian family and later marries their eldest daughter, Sonal. The couple then moves to Uganda to work at a pharmacy. In 1972, Pirbhai’s son Vinod and his wife and three daughters, who have sunk roots into Uganda, are exiled by Idi Amin, with most of the family moving to Toronto, before their lives are disrupted again by the 1992 racial uprising. The book vacillates between several characters and we never really get to know any one of them very well, so the take home message is more the situation, how families come to be immigrants not just once but multiple times, and how that feels. It is well written and a promising first novel.

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