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The namesake Cover Image Downloadable audiobooks Downloadable audiobooks

The namesake

Lahiri, Jhumpa (Author). Choudhury, Sarita. (Added Author).

Record details

  • Physical Description: remote
    electronic resource
  • Publisher: [Santa Ana, Calif.] : Books on Tape, 2007.

Content descriptions

General Note:
Downloadable audio file.
Title from: Title details screen.
Unabridged.
Duration: 10:09:45.
Participant or Performer Note: Read by Sarita Choudhury.
Summary, etc.: Now a major motion picture! The namesake follows the Ganguli family through its journey from Calcutta to Cambridge to the Boston suburbs. Ashima and Ashoke Ganguli arrive in America at the end of the 1960s, shortly after their arranged marriage in Calcutta, in order for Ashoke to finish his engineering degree at MIT. Ashoke is forward-thinking, ready to enter into American culture if not fully at least with an open mind. His young bride is far less malleable. Isolated, desperately missing her large family back in India, she will never be at peace with this new world. Soon after they arrive in Cambridge, their first child is born, a boy. According to Indian custom, the child will be given two names: an official name, to be bestowed by the great-grandmother, and a pet name to be used only by family. But the letter from India with the child's official name never arrives, and so the baby's parents decide on a pet name to use for the time being. Ashoke chooses a name that has particular significance for him: on a train trip back in India several years earlier, he had been reading a short story collection by one of his most beloved Russian writers, Nikolai Gogol, when the train derailed in the middle of the night, killing almost all the sleeping passengers onboard. Ashoke had stayed awake to read his Gogol, and he believes the book saved his life. His child will be known, then, as Gogol.
System Details Note:
Requires OverDrive Media Console (file size: 146075 KB).
Mode of access: World Wide Web.
Subject: Young men Fiction
Massachusetts Fiction
East Indian Americans Fiction
Children of immigrants Fiction
Assimilation (Sociology) Fiction
Alienation (Social psychology) Fiction
Gogolʹ, Nikolaĭ Vasilʹevich 1809-1852 Appreciation Fiction
Genre: Bildungsromans.
Audiobooks.

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